Tuesday, 29 November 2011




For this project I picked the band ‘Admiral Fallow’, the reason at first was because I enjoyed the sound of their music but after studying them I realised;  I also liked their style they have for their album cover which is; simple, clean and neutral colours are used and also the venues which they have played at e.g T in The Park. One of the main things I noticed was the amount of times the band dressed appropriately for Glasgow weather, e.g in winter clothing, and this is what I decided to use as my data. I analysed twenty photographs of the band, these ranged from promotional to live shots, and at first I mainly focused on pieces of clothing which are worn during the winter to emphasise the kinda of weather Glasgow has. I then decided to add T-shirts to the data, again to highlight the weather conditions of Glasgow, this was mainly found in shots of the band when they were performing live. 
I used images of clothing to portray the amount of times that the band wore that particular item and the illustrated outline used to highlight the times when they did not. I thought this would be an interesting way to show the information that was collected and it also clearly highlights the difference between the amount of times the different items were worn. I used images were the clothing had a material which was a neutral colour, this was to highlight the band’s style for their promotional merchandise, e.g posters, and also for their own choice of clothing in the photographs, e.g the green hat is the lead singer/ songwriter Louis Abbott as he wears a green knitted hat, and the female singer wears patterned scarfs. I arranged the images in the order that the band stand in whilst on stage; the T-shirt is the cello player, the winter coat is the drummer, the hat is the lead singer, the scarf is the female singer and the rain coat is the bandmate who plays the clarinet. This is also why have I drawn a platform to portray a stage. I kept the background white, so the illustrations could be seen clearly and to go with the neutral style that I am trying to portray in the design. The font is I used was Baskerville the reason for this was because the band name is typed using a serif font, so I picked one that I felt best portrayed band’s style. By studying their posters and their album cover I could see that the kerning of the type is tight and the tracking is negative so I interpreted this into my design. I made certain words in my explanation bold to highlight key points in my information. 

Wednesday, 16 November 2011

Infographics

The poster has to be read for it to be completely understood, it is clear that the main theme of the poster is obesity, this can be seen from the image used and the title at the top of the poster. There is too much information, which makes you loose interest and get bored looking at the poster. The viewer can see that there is a clear focus of the topic obesity but is does not focus on a particular part or fact of obesity. If there was no image or title you would not be able to understand what the poster was about unless you read all the information. If you read the information then you do start to learn something but there is too many facts and information that the user gets bored and forgets what they have read. By using the image it does slightly engage the user as it catches your eye therefore draws to the poster but then the amount of information makes it uninteresting unless the topic is something that particular interests them.  The target user would be people who are in a waiting room at a hospital/doctors, the relationship is informative, as the designer wants to make the user aware of this growing problem. 
The space has been completely filled with type and there is not a clear layout, the design looks unorganised and the designer has just tried wrapped the type around the image in the centre of the page. There is not a clear hierarchy as the title is the same size as the percentages and then the reset of the type is a variety of sizes. The boldness of the type may convey a meaning and a link to obesity but it is not clear if this is intentional or not. It is not clear if the type has been used meaningfully or formally. An image of someone who is obese communicates the theme of the poster and is the first thing you see, so if that image was not there then it would not be clear as to what the poster is about. A literal image is used which is also symbolic as it portrays the theme. The form would be described as organic, the designer choosing this affects the understanding of the poster as it shows you the main topic of the design. 
Some of the type is in green and some is it surrounded in a green rectangle with white type, this makes the poster look quite clean which gives the impression that it would be in a doctor's waiting room. The style of the design makes the interpretation look quite messy and  unorganised. The designer was either given this topic or chose it themselves, they would have collected research first of all and then developed the data in order to pick the most important and interesting facts they would have used for the design. This would then have been developed into design concepts and then it would have been completed . 

Wednesday, 26 October 2011

Helvetica


I really enjoyed the film Helvetica, as I found it interesting to hear the different views on typography and the type Helvetica from a variety of designers. The things that I was not aware of before I had seen this film are; the fact that when Helvetica first came out designers loved neutralism and that is why they loved the type as it was clean and neutral. I also did not know its history, e.g. that it was designed by Edward and Alfred Hoffman in the 1960s in Switzerland and that it was Stempel who mentioned that idea of first calling the typeface Helveti (which is Latin for Switzerland). They decided to change it Helvetica as Edward Hoffman did not want to call it after a country.

 Specific things surprised throughout the film such as, the amount of designers who have different views on type, some of these were; that type should be expressive and should communicate the word it is trying to show and it should give a feeling/emotion, another view was that type should have an order therefore must aligned in grids and always be readable. It was surprising to see what Helvetica meant to a variety designers and how almost every opinion which was given was different in one way or more.

Parts of the film were quite humorous, for example when one of the designers pointed out Helvetica used in every life on the streets, and it was unbelievable how many things it was used for but where unnoticed e.g. Litter on a street bin. The amount that was shown was so surprising that it made you laugh. Also the way Stefan Sagmeister described what he felt and saw when he looked at Helvetica, how when it is used in just black lettering on the front of booklet which was white it said do not read me am boring, this added humour to the film. I also agreed with his point slightly that sometimes when a typeface is used and it is too simple and is just placed in black lettering on white paper it can look boring and not interest the reader at all.

A new designer that I would like to look into more detail is Michael C. Place this is because he was honest in saying how he did not know the technical side to typography but likes to take something ordinary and make it look beautiful, and enjoys designs that give the viewer emotion and feeling when looking at the piece. He also likes the idea of Helvetica and takes pride in taking the challenge of trying to change it to make it more beautiful but still recognisable as the typeface. The pieces of his own work that he showed I thought were rather interesting, and you could clearly see that he was taking an ordinary typeface and adding something to it to make more attractive to glaze upon. Another designer I found interesting was David Carson, however he not a new designer to myself, this is because I studied him during my time doing Advanced Art. All though it was great to hear his opinion of typography and I was not aware that he did not actually study it and thought it was inspiring that he just did what he felt was right and came out a great result at the end. I like the point he made about how type should communicate a feeling or emotion and used an article he designed as an example which he done in the font Dingbats, this was because he felt that the article was badly written and was boring to read and decided it was not worth reading therefore put it a typeface which was not legible.

At the start of the film I personally felt that they about the technical side to typography and go into great detail about the anatomy of Helvetica, which Carter explains and why certain parts of it were made that way, however meaningful statements about the type are added in now and again. As the film progresses the description of typography becomes a lot more expressive and meaningful and it discusses how type communicate something e.g. the smoothness of Helvetica almost looks humanist, and how it can affect someone.

After seeing the film, the way I will approach talking about type in the future I will be describing how it communicates what the design is saying and why it was chosen for that particular use. I would also go slightly into more detail in the technical side for example about the anatomy and hierarchy of the type. The film has made me think a lot more about Helvetica but it has not changed my stance as I was already pro-Helvetica but I would still would only use it for certain things, just communicate information. Even though Helvetica has been around for years and is everywhere, so I have grown up seeing Helvetica but its name was something I was not aware of it until recently. I think I would mainly use Helvetica for a something that has to be readable for example a sign or a main body of text.


Tuesday, 25 October 2011

Thats a Saucy Type

Getting Around



Sans serif fonts are used in this McGill's weekly bus ticket, this makes the ticket readable and legible. The use of different weights and scales highlights the important information within the ticket and the capital letters used at the start of every word signifies a different piece of information. 
The most prominent piece on this design is the date in which the ticket expires and the zone of the bus route, this has been done because the driver needs to be able to read the date so that it is obvious to them when a new ticket must be purchased and the zone is so the price can be calculated. The type is centre alignment and the date and zone have a bold weight when the rest is regular. 
The ticket is mainly used by students and business people mostly, this is why I think different coloured boxes are down the right and left side of the ticket as to appeal to everyone, however I do think a boarder of squares should be used rather than just down two sides as to appeal to children as well. The need of this item is so there is proof that you have actually purchased a unlimited travel ticket for the week and the date is also proof of this fact. I feel there is to much information on the ticket which is not required e.g. the information on the bottom of the ticket.  


Tuesday, 11 October 2011

&&&

The ampersand I have chosen from the 'Coming Together' font varies in weight from bold to fine lines, the fine lines which swirl around the symbol make it quite feminine and make it look more like a humanist letter form. The use of the bold weight in the design take away the calligraphy style and make it more digital, the use if this clearly show that the symbol is, &. 
The ascender gets finer and becomes the details around the symbol as well as part of it. If the scale was decreased then it would make it look squashed and it would be very difficult to see the intricate lines but you maybe able to still make the symbol out. 
The 'ET' can be seen however not very clearly the design has to be analysed to make it out . The whole design reminds me slightly of the art nouveau movement as the delicate detail which has been added to make the symbol more pleasing to look at also, the feminine feel to the design emphasises this as well.