For this assignment, we were to use typography, concepts, and themes to create "type based images that reflect the meaning of the words they portray. I decided to create a guitar using musical terms with bright, neon font colors on a black canvas.
Answer to Kraus Questions:
Clarity: Each word that is placed to make the shape of a guitar is apart of a music theme. I have the words, note, chorus, passion, rhythm, harmony, sing, tune, sound, lesson, jam, band, live, lyrics, melody, beat, acoustic, play, chord, song, rock, tone, electric, music, strings, guitar and riff. These words all work together toward the same overall message of a music theme. No one would misinterpret any of the pieces to mean something else and there isn't another message this design could portray.
Audience: My target audience are the people involved in my LTLE 372 class. Since the font colors I have chosen for this design are bright on a dark background, this tone would be happy and musical because of the words and picture I have chosen to convey. I hope this is a unique design that not too many people have seen before, yet I feel as though a typography design of a guitar has been done before. To me, my design looks like something that would be seen on an advertisement for a concert or a music store. When my target audience looks at this person, I hope they think of rock.
Purpose: This piece is not meant to sell a product, or to persuade, but to inform my audience of the musically upbeat in society. Music is a big part of our society and so it is just to be looked at as a positive design and one that informs my audience of things that deal with music.
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Monday, April 23, 2012
HARTS PROJECT
For this project, we were to develop instructional signage for HARTS (Harrisonburg and Rockingham Thermal Shelter) locations to inform, explain, guide, teach, and generate awareness among patrons, volunteers, and/or donors. The location my group was assigned was the Faith Community. We were given basic instruction, a list of visuals, any related files and the opportunity to communicate with our partnering team in the Instructional Design course. The purpose of this assignment was for us to design visuals for a real-world client, in consultation with instructional designers. We were given seven types of signs to make, which are shown below.
Faith Community Emergency Exit Only
4 signs that say emergency exit only
4 signs that say emergency exit only
Faith Community Check-In Sign
Pick up linen and toiletries here
Pick up linen and toiletries here
Faith Community Breaker Box Location
Breaker box located in nursery in case of power outage
Breaker box located in nursery in case of power outage
Faith Community Restricted Area
2 signs showing that say an area is restricted
Faith Community Smoking Area
Sign indicating that smoking area is outside
Faith Community Trash Collection
Sign indicating that trash collection is outside
Sign indicating that trash collection is outside
Faith Community Check-In Sign
No weapons, alcohol, drugs
No weapons, alcohol, drugs
Answer to Kraus Questions
Clarity: Each sign above are clearly and efficiently presented. The emergency exit sign not only has the the word in white with a red background indicating attention, but an image of a man running out of the door that shows alertness. The linens sign includes an image of linens and toiletries, which helps indicate what the person should be looking for. The breaker box sign has a power outage symbol, which represents a hazard. We also put an image of a man opening the breaker box. The restricted area sign has a man that is crossed off to portray no one being allowed in that area. The smoking sign has cigarettes being crossed off to portray no smoking is allowed. The trash sign has a trash bin on the curb to indicate that trash goes outside. The no weapons, alcohol, or drugs sign also has those items crossed off to show that they are not allowed. Each sign has images and words to help people understand a guideline. Each sign also has the Faith Community Church symbol as well as the HARTS symbol on the bottom of each sign to help bring all the signs together. They are also in the same font to help portray a community. We did the best we could with all the signs and I think they came out very well to help get the message of the signs off to the people looking at them.
Audience: Since the signs have been made to be put in the Faith Community Church, the people that attend this church is my target audience. The signs are very understandable and we use the appropriate lingo and images to help our message come across. We used the color red to show alertness to what was not allowed in the building and we put a black background on the break box sign to help portray that a power outage could occur. None of our signs talk down to our audience, they are just informative signs to get things across to the people at the church.
Purpose: These signs are made to share information about what is appropriate in the church. There are some signs that are sharing the rules and others that include where to pick something up such as the linens and toiletries sign. Since the purpose of the signs were given to use before we made the design, we did discuss everything. None of the signs have too many images so that the sign in unreadable. Everything is simple and to the point, yet is creative to be pleasing to the eye.
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Special Topics Presentation
For this assignment, we were asked to create visuals to share with the class to help explain the article we were given in class. Carly Goodwin and I read "From Media Consumption to Media Production: Applications of YouTube in an Eight-Grade Video Documentary Project" by Ching-Chin Lin. To summarize, this article was about the use of YouTube in a classroom. It focused on a study that showed eighth graders working on a film project for their class. They would search videos to get a better idea of how they were done and then work on their own to create a video. After we read and got a good idea of what our article was about we had to have ten visuals that we can share with our classmates. We used a copyright sign, a YouTube logo, a graph showing how YouTube users are increasing, a chart that shows how technology is changing from the past to today, a chart that shows that watching YouTube leads to making videos, an example of cropping of an image can lead to a different perspective of the image, a picture of how YouTube is used in the classrooms and at home, vocabulary words that we found important in the article, and a video we found online about the use of media in a classroom. We also made our poster board look like a Mac Computer to add to our presentation.
Answers to Krause's Questions
Connotation: Our visual style for this component ties in with our theme of YouTube because we used a YouTube video to share and also made our poster board look like a YouTube screen on a Mac Computer. We used color backdrops for our images that we picked at random and each image has a different size proportion. We showed other presenters our presentation and they seemed to perceive our poster and video as the same way we did. They understood what our article was talking about and it seemed to make sense to them just like we planned.
Attributes: I am satisfied with our visual weight, structure, color and presentational style. Posters may seem boring to most, but it gets the point across. I wish we got a little bit more creative in how we went about showing our material to the class, but the first thing we thought of was a poster. I wish I knew how to work Prezi or some other visual that would have came off a lot more appealing and interesting to the class. I think the video added a good touch because it talked about a lot of the points our article did of using media in the classroom.
Placement: The poster and the video were both the main focal points of our presentation. The summary that we had laid out was only there to give an overview of what we would tell them through our presentation. We summed up our article with the poster and video, which held a lot of people's attention, while the summary on the sheet of paper would not get the point across as well.
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Primary and Complementary Colors
For this assignment, we were asked to create a sign for out HARTS project using primary colors and complementary colors. My first sign that I made uses the primary colors of red, yellow and blue. For the second sign that I made, I used the complementary colors of the primary colors. Complementary colors are opposites on the color wheel. So for this sign, I used green to be complementary of red, violet to be complementary of yellow and orange to be complementary of blue.
Answers to Krause's questions
Connotation: If I were really to make this sign for a building, I would only use the colors red and white to convey the emergency exit sign. Red is the color that shows alertness and so I think that would make most sense and white the most easily red on white. I would though use these font choices because they are basic and making the capitol makes it stand out.
Attributes: I am satisfied with the visual weight, structure, color and presentational style for this assignment. I am not happy with it if I were to use this in a room for a large amount of people to see. The colors behind the font making the font hard to read and are not pleasing to the eye. The color scheme's do work for the primary and complimentary colors for this assignment though and meets the criteria for the class. The text is large enough for an audience to read, but the colors could be better and more appropriate for this type of sign.
Placement: The words are the main focus of this sign. I also believe the color red should be used as the backdrop to cause attention and alertness to people who pass the sign. The words are placed in the middle of the frame because they are the main focus. The alignment of the words are centered and nothing fancy needed to be done to distract the readers.
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