Showing posts with label design resource. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design resource. Show all posts

9.25.2016

Business Card Inspiration

As an instructor, I post quite a lot of this type of site— the "inspiration sites." I love the craft of designing a business card, and often the examples I refer to  take the format of the business card to completely new dimensions: stainless steel cards, cards printed on wood, innovative shapes, and incredible folding forms.
Every so often though, I like the more restrained. The reality of being a designer is that the vast majority of clients aren't amenable to spending a small fortune to print on custom fabricated fiber-glass and aluminum cards using specially formulated ink. The parameters of the pragmatic job also require occasional external inspiration.
Here's a site that focuses on that.

6.15.2016

TYPOGRAPHY from the APPLE WWDC

Every so often, the powers that be at Mac have a HUUUGE get together in the form of their Worldwide Developer Conference. While it could be argued that this is a conference primarily for Apple Partners (especially their developers), they have incredibly informative and educational seminars and presentations.

Not that the practical type user thinks about the issues of TYPOGRAPHY in their everyday work life—but those in any graphic communication discipline ought to.

While this presentation goes near the half-hour mark, it includes an incredibly rich introduction to basic TYPOGRAPHY as it is used practically within applications. If you are at all curious about the discipline of typography, and are willing to listen to this introduction, you'll be rewarded with a very good basic introduction to typography (with a bit of application development and the integrated usage of fonts in the mix.

Check it out
[click image for link]

3.22.2016

INFOGRAPHIC ON ESSENTIAL WEB PAGE FEATURES…

"INFOGRAPHICS" amaze me. They are the very essence of visual communication…communicating the essential information that you need to know in a quickly processed "chunk of visual deliciousness."
If I had my way, all chapters in textbooks would contain an INFOGRAPHIC at the beginning.

I stumbled upon this infographics for the "50 Features That Every Small Business Website Must Have." 
While this deals with web, it is much more about effective marketing communications, so all designers may want to take a peek. (from B2C)



http://www.business2community.com/infographics/50-features-every-small-business-website-must-infographic-01474284#bd2FwWV9mSgMzdgs.97

3.21.2016

FREE DESIGN GOODIES!

I love finding other bloggers and blog ad digest posts with downloads for the "hungry" student. @3 sites with free stuff for you. HEY…you're a student, and there is free stuff out there. 'Nuff said.

10.19.2015

An Open Source Workflow for Photographers?

In the 24 odd years of teaching, invariably at least one student will ask if there is an alternative to buying "industry standard software." There have always been alternatives to the industry leaders, but the fact remains that much of the industry has been structurally locked into the leader (and usually with a pretty sound logic behind it).

Let me say that I strongly advocate an industry standard workflow. The standardized plug-ins make negotiating things like color space matching very easy for beginners. And if you are doing anything that will appear in print, there is a whole other dimension to press profiles that needs to be added to the mix.

There are OPEN SOURCE software solutions. This recent PETAPIXEL article about an entire free, open-source workflow solution intrigued me. And to the student/s about to ask me the question on a Photoshop Alternative, here you go.

It really looks quite impressive and comprehensive— addressing most of the concerns in a full-process workflow.

However for me, I'll stick with the 90 plus percent marketshare leader. But I will certainly check this out (and keep it book-marked for those adventurous enough to jump into a full-on Linux workflow.

FOSS raw editor

1.15.2015

GREAT PHOTOSHOP RESOURCE

I regularly come across these, and on occasion repost them. They are curated by others (Michael Zhang for Peta Pixel here…or in some other instances a collective of others) and offer many different tutorials and “how-to” guides. This offers 50 “GO TO” tutorials on some of the most frequently required items.
Enjoy!

12.20.2014

Typography Tips and Tricks…

A student (Chris Uran) share this one via FB. Great article (although some of the tips I am not 100% onboard with) but by and large its "on" and a great resource read. Thanks Chris!

5.24.2013

Branding Cleverness...

Graphic Designer and Art Director Ben Pieratt has created a brand. That alone isn't news, since visually articulating a brand is at the heart of what most designers working in Marketing Communications (or Advertising, or  Brand cultivation, or whatever pseudonym for Advertising you care to use) do regularly.

More interestingly, Pieratt is exploring the concepts and constructs of branding itself. He has taken the  very definition of brand, and flipped it upside-down. He has worked from the visual end, and created the roots for a brand and put it on the free-market auction block.
To me, this is more of an exercise in brand development—the equivalent of taking the design adage of "form follows function" and turning it on its ear...creating the form first and then finding the function for it.

While the pragmatism of creating and cultivating a visual brand beforehand, then later matching it with a product or service is intriguing and an exercise in "purposeful vagary," it can also be viewed as the equivalent of off-the-rack fashion—something unheard of in the early twentieth century, yet the preferred mode by mid-century.

On a personal note, Pieratt's brand reminds me of the bright, geometric design of the mid-eighties (as used by brands like Letraset at the time). I love the retro, yet very hip'n'cool feel.

Check out Pieratt's HESSIAN brand!
(link image below)


5.08.2013

COMPOSITION FROM A MASTER

There's a lot of chatter about the difference of things, but not so much about the commonalities.

"The discipline of design is basically about solving a problem within the construct of a field...that field may be the blank canvas of a space (product design), an entire environment (architecture), or a flat page (graphic design.)"1

I find a lot of students groaning/musing on our college's facebook group about "photography" versus "illustration," or even "page layout." While it is certainly valid to group items by their media for mass assessment  or comparative evaluation, you can easily loose fact that they share the common thread of VISUALLY COMMUNICATING ( a term that has gone out of vogue, and seems to be making a comeback).

The goal for both is to communicate something VISUALLY on the plane of 2d. The other commonality that they share is the fact that the message communicated needs to have a hierarchy... the thread that binds all of the 2d disciplines is composition.

That's why this article on COMPOSITION by the  great HENRI CARTIER-BRESSON is such a good (and IMHO essential) read! Click on the link below (photo) to go to PETA-PIXEL for an amazing compositional lesson–whether your medium is Photography or Gouache – it's worth the time.

photo © magnum


1 P. Pham 2005

4.12.2013

GREATEST SITE FOR DESIGNERS (REDUX)?

This is one of my favorites. It has expanded since its last mention on the blog, but is still a wonderful resource for graphic design students. This specific link has some really great photoshop tips, but if you are into anything in the world of visual communications...this has to be a 'go to' site.

Color Psychology in Mark Creation

courtesy the Visual.ly website: a basic primer on color psychology in the design of Marks (yep...the mo' better and proper name for what most folks will call logo). The psychology bit  is contestable, as it complies to a western cultural norm...but none-the-less worth studying, understanding, and then exploring.

Color Psychology in Logo Design

4.06.2012

STUDENT DESIGN SHOW 2012


YOU MIGHT HAVE HEARD... the Student Design Show at the Racine Campus of Gateway Technical College will be going on this year. I am chairing the show this go-round, and (man alive) I am busy with all of the things going on with work, home, show and the like.

Please stop by for our reception on April 24th (6 – 8 pm, Campus Library). There will be snacks and (hopefully) a lot of people!

I am also trolling for anyone who works in Graphic Design, Advertising, Marketing, P.R., or the like. We are looking for Judges for this years show, and you are exactly who we need.
Please drop me a line.

You can find out  more about the show by going to the Gateway Home Page:
http://www.gtc.edu
and looking for the image to click upon.
Additionally, you can go directly to the show information site:
http://www.gtc.edu/student-design-show

3.25.2012

"CHEAT SHEETS" for web folk

To the garden variety teacher, cheat sheets are a bad thing... a very bad thing. But in the world of programming, languages, and scripts, they are a very good thing. As this blog says: "No matter how good  programmer you are, you can't memorize everything. It often happens to spend more time searching for a particular library, tag or declaration, than implementing it on our code."

I personally am NOT a programmer or coder. I am a retro-fitted designer (as is common with the art-directors of the late 80's and early 90's). This is a great collection of cheat sheets for folks like me as well as the hard-core I.T. guy.


2.20.2012

40 ONLINE GENERATORS FOR WEB DESIGNERS (and WEB DESIGN STUDENTS)

TRIPWIRE has assembled a collection of some of the slickest, most useful "generators" for web. Online Generators can make creating cool stuff take minutes instead of hours. CHECK IT OUT.

DESIGNUS COOLUS

Super cool design ideas (mostly product design) to inspire you. Check it.

2.08.2012

GREATEST SITE FOR DESIGNERS (REDUX)?

This is one of my favorites. It has expanded since its last mention on the blog, but is still a wonderful resource for graphic design students. This specific link has some really great photoshop tips, but if you are into anything in the world of visual communications...this has to be a 'go to' site.

9.03.2011

iPAD apps for TYPE STUDENTS

If you are a student in a class studying TYPOGRAPHY (in my district there is the all-in-one Design Concepts class) and you own an iPAD, you gotta get your hands on this app. VEry cool, and only 1.99 through the APP store.


iPAD apps for designers

A fellow blogger who posts professional design issues posted this great list of  iPad apps for Graphic Artists. In no particular order (I think some of the productivity, mockup, and productivity ones are most essential), here is the compiled list:



5.07.2011

SAVE WEBPAGES AS PDF FILES

Have you ever wished you could save a webpage as a document? As a student, this could be a great way to supplement your notes with web content, or create e-docs.
Or, perhaps you are someone putting up a webpage who would like to make the content accessible as PDF files?
The two sites below offer free conversion, and while they are not perfected, they do a pretty good job of making HTML content into PDF files. They are almost identical (based on the same program). Check 'em out...






5.01.2011

ONLINE (CLOUD) IMAGE EDITORS REDUX

As we've said a million times before, Photoshop is the undisputed champion amongst image editors. The sheer diversity of uses and plethora of tools (including prepress industry standard tools) just make it a fact.

There are, however, a huge pack of second tier programs that include open source, freeware, and "the cloud" as it's been coined. These are often more than sufficient for the needs of the casual user, and with legitimate copies of Photoshop costing up to 600 dollars, the price of FREE can't be beat!

Even Adobe realizes this, as one of the first items on the list is the (marketing genius)  referentially named "PHOTOSHOP.COM."

A few weeks back, I was working on a friend's computer and needed to do a fast edit on a photo before uploading. Alas, with no PHOTOSHOP on the computer I was sunk. Then I went to one of the image-editing sites and was able to make short work of it. I'm sure you'll find one that meets many of your needs nicely!