Thursday, December 17, 2009
hi again!
Helvetica
I figured if there was a two hour long movie on the typeface Helvetica, I could right a two minute blog post on it. Helvetica. Is. Amazing. There's even tee shirts made about Helvetica. Like the ones that say "sex drugs helvetica bold" "use helvetica"and "you had me at helvetica". Its like the cure-all, you know from My Big Fat Greek Wedding, but instead of Windex, its Helvetica.
Sneakers
Functionality in Design
An important factor in design is functionality. One of the best examples of this I can think of that would be well received by people my age is the Rain Vodka bottles. Not only is the vodka delicious, once you finish the bottle you fill it up with water and stick a light under it and it makes a beautiful light.
Roald Dahl


One of my favorite authors and illustrators when I was younger was Roald Dahl. I think the thing he has taught me the most is that your drawings do not have to be perfect nor do they need to look realistic. I like the sketched quality to his work and when I am having problems getting something to look right, I try to infuse a little Dahl in my work.
Duchamp
One idea that I always try to keep in my head is the idea of simplicity. Especially now while in school simplicity is key for me because of time restraints. An 'artist' who is great for simplicity is Marcel Duchamp. This is the man who bought a urinal, signed his name on it and named it "Fountain." The whole thing probably took him about 5 minutes and he made millions off of it. Remember its not how long it takes you to do something its just how well you do it and great success can come with little effort.
Truth to Materials
One idea found with in design that always intrigued me was the idea of "truth to materials" This idea came from Pugin and it means that nothing should be altered from its original state. Therefore concrete cant be painted, it must stay grey and rough. Wood should be also stay as it is in nature and not be shiny and used for a car such as it is on the picture in the left. I have actually used this concept this semester while doing the orange peel porsche tutorial. For this tutorial I made an old "Woody" station wagon to made out of "wood."
Cardboard Furniture
My next topic is the one of cardboard furniture. This idea was started by Leo Kampf and has taken off like crazy. It is an interesting concept to think that thin strips of cardboard could actually hold up a human. And because it is so flexible at first it is possible to make really cool designs like the curvy chairs. The texture would also have to be pretty interesting because you use corrugated cardboard.
Symmetry

I like symmetry, the problem with it is it can be very hard to pull off correctly. When done right though, the effect is quite epic. Take for example Blood Sugar Sex Magik by the Red Hot Chilli Peppers. This album somehow pulls off this excellent symmetrical appearance without being exactly symmetrical. The faces of course will all be slightly different because they are all faces of the band members. The black and white helps to combat this though. Their tongues are all the same graphic representation and snakes around each other into a pattern. The album title and the name of the band both happen to be four words set at the same location on each part of the page. The flowers are the same in the opposing corners and the one in the middle is a nice "mix" of the two types of flowers. the splash of red gives the piece the extra oomph it needs. Them vs. You vs. Me by Finger Eleven is something completely different. The color scheme for this was well planned and the textured background offsets with silhouettes of the band quite nicely. The most striking thing about this cover however is the different directions the band members are looking. It ties in nicely with the title of the album.
Album Covers

Music not only influences us through how it sounds, but also the art it produces, whether that art be music video, fan induced art or album covers. However an album cover does a great deal to sell a record. If the cover looks interesting and draws a person in, they will be more likely to purchase the album to listen to the music. The cover art tells just as much if not more of a story than the music contained on the cd. Here are two of my favorites. The typographical one is Riot! by Paramore. It gives off the impression that the words really are rioting on the page through their use of typography and color. The next cover, Spiritual Machines by Our Lady Peace tells the listener a story of the human as some machine assembled by a higher power. It is intense and fascinating.
Ed Hardy
Blog Spoon Graphics
Just Creative Design



I also follow many graphic design blogs in an attempt to use others as inspiration for my work and to get good tips from, because I feel that learning from others and their mistakes and successes in the business is the best way to learn. One of my favorite blogs to follow is the Just Creative Design blog run by Jacob Cass. Jacob is self-employed as a graphic designer, specializing in the fields of corporate identity (logo) design, web design, print design and branding with the majority of his time spent designing and implementing marketing promotions for small businesses such as logos, websites, letterhead, business cards, packaging and more. He is an inspiration for me because these are the kind of things that I would like to do. Not only that, he is the same age as I am but is already running his own design company. I truly look to him as a source of inspiration in my work. I have included some of my favorite pieces of his work. The one I like the best is the Drink Coaster that he made warning people of the dangers of spiked drinks.
Favorite Graphic Designer

My favorite graphic designer is Stefan Sagmeister. He designs everything from advertisements to album covers. Not only do I really like his work and try to use it for inspiration for my own work, but I also greatly identify with his motto. His motto is "Design that needed guts from the creator and still carries the ghost of these guts in the final execution." I love that, because it truly exemplifies the amount of heart and soul that goes into creating design projects. I think one of my favorite pieces of work by Stefan is AIGA Detroit poster in which his intern actually cut the typography into Sagmeister's skin.
Monoface
Tokyo Drum Machine
Wednesday, December 16, 2009
Advertisements Using Nature




Advertising



Wired Magazine Covers




Layouts
Of course, since I am a digital media major I decided to test my knowledge and explain to them why they liked it. This poster, like all the others had the weird blurred edge, however it was not blurring out a crappy background it was framing the person with in it who took up almost the whole poster. It was a guy whose was leaning forward on a countertop or something of the like. He was leaning in from the left and he had his chin resting on his arm which was at about a 45 degree angle from the table. His head was not centered in the picture but slightly to left of the center. This made it so that the entire poster was not in one center line, but slightly skewed, making for a more interesting composition.
I pointed all this out to my friends and they sat there looking for a moment and went, "Wow. You're right. That's crazy." And I smiled, knowing that I had learned two important lessons: 1) my four years at Albright might not have been wasted afterall and 2) people know when something is wrong with a design, whether they "know" it or not. So when designing, keep that in mind. The details do matter and always check your work with non-design people.
Tuesday, December 1, 2009
Business Cards




Our final project is to build an identity/portfolio/website for ourselves and while trying to come up with a business card design for myself I decided to look into some graphic designers business cards in order to get some inspiration. There are many interesting designs out there but I chose the four that most appealed to me.
The first card, Estetic Kabinet, first caught my eye because of the color scheme. All the colors work well together and are not overpowering. I was then drawn to the use of the patterned background. The monotony is broken up by a lighter fragment in the upper left hand corner. This element is then transferred over to the back of the business card and that particular section is in the corner to add a little design element to the back. The logo also works well and they composition is very nicely done.
The second card, CDS also used a textured background. I like theirs even more because they mute it out so that it is not as prominent as Estetic Kabinet's. CDS's logo is also very nice; the colors are well thought out. There are two elements in this business card that usually does not work out well but I believe the company has pulled them off well. One is the curved text, which they do make work but I still do not like and feel that they could have done something else with. The second is centered type. They did however manage to make this look presentable and not very formal.
The third card, Hinge, I chose because of its funkiness. This business card is folded in half so that it "hinges." This is a really good example of showing and not telling. I'm not sure of who's card is the fourth one but I loved it so much that I had to include it here. If I was an employer I would not forget this card. It is very simplistic, yet is says so much. The logo which is a meteorite, has actually "burned" the card. There is also great use of negative space.
Saturday, November 21, 2009
Typography


If I learned nothing else in my four years of college I would like to say that I learned about typography. Typography is perhaps the pinnacle of design. You can have an amazing layout and it be nothing with out the right typeface. Case in point there is a film over an hour in length talking just about the font Helvetica. As a person who also writes, I love thinking about the power of language and words. Combining my two favorite things is an amazing concept. I decided to take a look at some typographic design. Here are two of my favorites. I like the Times New Roman one because it gives new life back to an old misused and often hated typeface. Most, myself included think of term papers and long hours in front of a computer and not designing something when I think of Times New Roman. The second one, Death by Typography makes me chuckle because from my own experience with typography that is exactly the feeling I get sometimes when trying to find just the right typeface.
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Wedding Invitation Design

Wedding invitations don't always have to be humdrum and boring. (You are invited to the holy union of Joe and Jill, etc etc). I found this interesting interactive invitaiton while Stumbling around. I think the thing I like the most about this invitation is its use of typography to make the document interesting. Sure the content is fun too but without the typography this invitation would be nothing. The layout, though it is straightforward and not crazy, works well with the information and allows for a nice flow throughout the document.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
The Spaces Inbetween

'Spock'

'The Big Squeeze'

'Gun Crime Illustration'
I almost feel tempted to put on some DMB for this post, however I am really feeling the playlist based off of Duncan Sheik's 'Barely Breathing.' The gods at Apple have once more fully satisfied me with the Genius feature on iTunes. If you don't have it on your iTunes, I implore you, pleeeeeease go on and set it up now. GET TO DA CHOPPA!
Anyway, the other night I had a few moments to myself and I started Stumbling. (I know, I know I just ranted about it, but I really do love StumbleUpon. So 3 hours later, I was left looking at this amazing vector artist who uses negative space to paint a picture within a picture. It was the perfect marriage of literature and design, the ex-English major and current DM major in me felt fully satisfied at this union.
Norma Bar creates minimalist drawings that pack a maximus punch. Hidden with in his drawings are other drawings which tell a different story all together. I believe his work is very important to other designers to look at because it helps them to see that less is not more. It also teaches the lesson that as a designer and a consumer one must always look below the surface and see what else is available or what else you can show your audience. By making his pictures vectorized, Bar gives his drawings a unique aesthetic and also allows for them to be shrunk down and blown up without loosing any of their character.
Saturday, September 12, 2009
ABC easy as 123 or simple as Do Re Mi

So I have to create an ABC list website for my Web 2 class. (Hi Jocelyn since I know you are reading this.) I ran through various ideas back and forth and could not settle on anything I was happy with. Until I had a huge explosion in my brain. I don't know if I finally drank enough coffee and the synapses fired or there was some internal combustion but whatever happened I had a brilliant idea. I always loved the Air Toons website (www.airtoons.com) and I've always enjoyed reading things on the Internet that were people's attempt to say what to do in the case of - oh say a zombie attack - or whatever else was on their minds that day.
And I thought to myself: "Self (cause thats how I refer to me) why don't you create this ridiculous list of things do "In Case of an Emergency:" It could be for any emergency at anytime. And you can illustrate it using the air plane safety instruction manual as your muse. Because you know, the illustrations will be simple and affective and you know you found that tutorial thanks to StumbleUpon this summer, so even if you have some issues with the illustrations you know that you can refer back to that. And you also know you live with two people who are very willing to offer their services and can act as props when you take pictures and they'll just laugh at the stuff you came up with and it will be very self satisfying and oh look there goes a giant playdoh rabbit hopping down the street ... lets go chase after it."
Sorry I go off in tangents, especially in my head. But you know what I mean. You get what I'm saying. So there's my list. Here's my inspiration. Call me childish but I had to post this one cause it had the word penis on it. Or maybe its some kind of Freudian signal.
And for you others out there in the vast, amusing, sometimes terrifying land that is the interwebs: Airplane Safety Instructions Tutorial , the tutorial, brought to you by Blog Spoon Graphics. Its one of my favorite sites. And I discovered it via Twitter. How about that?
Ode to the Interwebs


Dear Internet,
Thank you so much for all that you do for me. When I need to find information quickly you are there. When I need to find some kind of image you are there for me. When I need to listen to some music after getting a song stuck in my head you are there for me. When I feel the need to remind myself just how old I am (and how much it freaks me out that I am friends with people born in the 1990s) I can reminisce the 90s and my childhood with you. When I need to burn my eyes out with bleach to get rid of the things that can't be unseen you are there for me.
You have brought me things such as 2 girls 1 cup, The Ultimate Showdown, Phillip DeFranco, The Kitty Kat Dance, Harry Potter Puppet Pals, Lol Cats, Bluhd, countless versions of people getting pwnd whether it be by nut shots, head shots or roommate pranks (The Bird in the Cereal Box and ensuing pranks are definitely epic wins). You have brought me so many videos of cute babies ... Evil Eye Baby, Laughing Baby, Baby's First Laugh. You have brought me "unforgivable," "scarlett takes a tumble" and thousands of Chuck Norris jokes. You have brought me the Helen Keller Simulator.
You Internet - you have made me feel like a horrible person for the stuff I have laughed at. You have entertained me. You have made me cry. You have kept me up all night because I just couldnt stop stumbling. You have made go on countless of related posts and related video trails. i have lost myself for hours on Wikipedia, College Humor, YouTube and Facebook. YOU HAVE TURNED ME INTO A STALKER. I don't want to know how drunk so and so got last night and what they did. Or maybe I do, because it means I can procrastinate doing homework for 5 more minutes.
So fuck you Internet. Fuck you through all your chat rooms and videos and social networking sites. Go Tweet this to your celebrity friends. Or retweet this, because I'm gonna tweet it first. And then I'm gonna actually do the blog posts that I have to do for class and maybe blog some more. Because that is my new internet addiction.
Hi, my name is Lacey. I am an Interholic. I am also a caffieneaholic, workaholic and alcoholic.
Just kidding Interwebs, you know I love you.
Tuesday, September 8, 2009
Get down with your dirty self





I love advertising, absolutely positively love it. It was my first love and I always like looking up random ads and see what people are doing - the more creative the better. While using my favorite time-sucker, Stumble Upon, I found this awesome ad layout.
This advertisement is out of this world. To come up with a concept that allows someone such a hands-on experience is sure to keep the product in the front of the consumer's mind. And this of course is the main objective of advertising.
http://www.changethethought.com/roland-tiangco/
Sunday, September 6, 2009
Does the use of scare tactics in advertising work?

We've all watched the "Truth Against Tobacco" ads. From the one that had body parts strewn everywhere, to the people just collapsing outside of the office of a 'Big Tobacco' company, to the one where the guy sings through a mechanical larynx, these ads were thought provoking and sometimes disturbing. They always seemed like they did a decent job at discouraging people, especially kids and teens, away from nicotine but does that kind of advertisement work anymore?
More and more lately, I'm starting to see a trend that involves using graphic images to portray the advertiser's point. The one that hits me the most is The Montana Meth Project.
"The Meth Project is the largest advertiser in Montana, reaching 70-90% of teens three times a week. This is saturation-level advertising.
The research-based messaging campaign—which graphically portrays the ravages of Meth use through television, radio, billboards, and Internet ads—has gained nationwide attention for its uncompromising approach and demonstrated impact. The campaign's core message, "Not Even Once®," speaks directly to the highly addictive nature of Meth."
-Montana Meth Project (www.montanameth.org)
The Meth Project has advertisements in the print, television and radio industries. They combine graphic images with simple sentences that induce the viewer to think about the situation and how it would affect their lives. The advertisers try to come up with scenarios that would be prevalent to teens such as partying, hooking up, putting on makeup with friends and having a boyfriend/girlfriend. I really believe that these advertisements are so effective because they are so blunt about meth and what happens when you use it.
America isn't the only country using blunt advertising. Britain recently came up with a public service announcement that shows the consequences of teens texting while driving. (Not to say that its safe for adults to text and drive either.) This is a really good example of what could happen when you text and drive and I think its a step in the right direction, however my only issue with the video is that it exemplifies a lot of bad habits for driving. The girls are all laughing and talking and looking around, they aren't just driving and texting and I wish that the advertisers would discuss those issues as well.
Check the PSA out here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R0LCmStIw9E
The Montana Meth Project: www.montanameth.org


