Monday, May 17, 2010

Kathy McCoy workshop

The final Thursday and Friday of our spring semester we had the privilege of sitting under the teaching and direction of Kathy McCoy and a workshop about audience centered design. Very interesting. The two day program takes a good look at how design can be so much more effective when the audience one is designing for is researched before starting any graphic work. In fact, our job was to take the information that we gleaned from our specific subculture and make a poster out of it. This poster would then be used by a design team to make any and all artifacts for this particular group.

Kate and I had lunch with two muslim businessmen at the Olive Cafe near Grandview and here is our poster that embodies our research:


We presented the poster at 12.30pm on Friday and received some great input and feedback. The final piece will be entitled "Muslim Businessmen in the Community" and include the following changes:
- portraits of muslim men to make it more personable
- other 'phrases' that muslim men use
- more international appeal
- include more graphic reference to technology, laptops, email, cell phones etc

Information Architecture website

Click here to see the final website that's hosting my journals. There's still a lot to be done but you get the basic idea.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Final poster for Typelab

This is the final poster for Typelab 2011. We rejigged the positioning of the elements to create even more intrigue. The design has become almost all texture and pattern based. I love how our font experiments coupled with a conference theme have generated such a beautiful art piece - which is what we originally set out to do!


Tuesday, May 11, 2010

The Journal Piece

This is a beautiful one hundred page journal (with cover) that delegates will get on entry to the type conference. The idea is they will use the book to write thoughts in after reflecting on the lectures in the beautiful grounds outside and bring those ideas in to the lab times. It's exciting to me to see this artifact. I really long for quiet times of reflection in my own life, to process thoughts and ideas and receive new ones, away from the frenetic pace of 21st century living. If this conference actually existed, I would go. Life is way too busy sometimes and full of man and his stuff and opinions. When I actually get a chance to get away, to go outside, to see the beauty of God's creation I am always filled with wonder and my spirit is always lifted. This would be an event you would not want to miss! Where else could you get time to do this at conference? Who does this? Maybe your boss would even pay for you to go!

The book also comes with a plan of the site, bios on the speakers and a schedule of events: it's a sort of one-stop-shop book that includes everything.









Monday, May 10, 2010

Final Typelab teaser video

Luke and I resolved to do some minor tweaks on the final teaser motion piece namely, the logo is the new revised logo, the names of the speakers stay around a little longer for better eye recognition and obviously the typelab website is the new green.

Friday, May 7, 2010

Typelab Poster

Typelab Promotional video

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Final Wayfinder

Here's the inside of the map. It will fold in half, with some reference to the shuttle cocks on the front, not sure yet. It's been a tough project to figure out how to make a map interactive, fun and emotionally engaging, as any poetic piece should.

Top half:


Bottom half:


Folded view:


Sunday, May 2, 2010

Wayfinding revamped!

I've taken the abstract lines and shapes and given them some life and emotion on a three panel folding brochure. The front will be the section with 'A trip to see the birdies.' Hopefully with the addition of some more icons this will be quite the experience (I know I'd like to check out that tennis club!)




Garden plan!

Lyn came home one day last fall with a bag of beans. I took one look at them and with a bewildered look on my face said, "did you not know we've got bushes of those in the garden?"

"Oh no," she replied, "I didn't know!"

This season I've drawn up a plan of the garden and stuck it on the fridge. It not only serves as a reminder as to what's in the garden but is also helpful for knowing where things are. It's amazing what a simple piece of information architecture will do to help ease communication!


Saturday, May 1, 2010

Conference Project Process

This was a great project to learn visual typography. What we ended up with was a beautiful poster graphic made from type, which was our objective in the very beginning of the program. Score! The combination of experimenting with type over a long period of time, documenting that work and then using that documentation to create a logo mark for a conference and graphics for that event proved to be a very productive method. The resultant graphic/poster for the conference I think accurately conveys a sense not only of experimentation at the event itself but other attributes of the event such as getting away from the noise into the outside and being inspired by the created order and the peace therein.

Input from the three guest critiques on Friday proved to be valuable, particularly one comment-filming the stop motion from different angles to create more intrigue and anticipation. The construction of type from leaves and broken machine parts was something Luke and I both struggled with initially but the results were clearly good enough to inspire others. I believe because we pushed through and 'kept going' blindly (learned from the first Junior semester) our efforts eventually yielded some great results. These results were things neither of us had ever seen before, which made us both very excited. Luke is a great worker I think, one who is able to leave doors open enough for new things to happen and ideas to come through. He's got some guts in terms of pushing the envelope and staying the course without baulking and that steady character is good for design. Go Luke!

The copy for the conference was written by both of us. As Luke and I had similar experiments in the beginning, our writing really did fit together well for the second part of the semester. The words we both wrote spoke to the same audience and felt the same way. The design and layout of each artifact came from one basic principle that we both carried, as a team - we wanted conference participants to engage in type experimentation in a totally open minded way, that they would get excited about using all kinds of materials and be excited by getting outside to be inspired (an idea that our graphics conveyed beautifully). The speakers we chose bolstered these values, Karl Hyde is first and foremost a musician but studied in design. His crazy creative experiments in music and art would feed so well into an off the wall event like this. Neville, Phillip and Philip would all bring a more serious, professional tone to the event but equally expressive in terms of wild experimentation and original results.

In terms of applying typographic knowledge to the artifacts/images that we made, we were successful because we integrated the two rather than kept them separate. The graphics fed the type and visa versa. The stop motion piece fused type with moving objects creating more of a sense of integration than if they were apart. After Luke had built this animation we spent time fine tuning pace, fades and transitions, things like that. The understanding and knowledge learned from all of the type lectures was good matter to employ on the motion piece, Journal and poster bringing them all into professionalism in terms of technical detail.