Showing posts with label OUGD403 Studio brief 1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label OUGD403 Studio brief 1. Show all posts

Friday, 11 October 2013

Design Skills - Alphabet Soup Inspiration

Design Skills - Alphabet Soup Inspiration

Now i have basis of the concept i want to apply to my letterforms i am going to begin to look at some inspiration sources. This is an ongoing thing so there will be lots off images posted up from varying sources some been visual based like designers and some outsourced like architecture and mechanics to maintain a broad range of inspiration. 

ThreeSix font found on typetoken.net
Legopress by Levi Bunyam
Valee Duhamel
have chosen these 3 examples so far for there range of styles and processes used. My favorite been the lego press due to its unique production method creating his own letter press has made a nice final outcome that emulates a visual brail type style. I would like to look at other sources of making prints and mark making. The threesix font is nice in terms of its abstract style i like how retro it looks so to speak like the old space invaders typeface, very digital in its style yet clean and simple. The last source of inspiration is a sculpture that to me represents fracture. It looks like an explosion caught mid motion, i like this idea of motion been portrayed in a still object as I have tried out in my rough thumbnails and would like to progress again, use of color would be nice but to maintain legibility of letterforms i will just take inspiration from the shapes and the geometric layout of them.


Apeloig Drop

Above is a typeface I am really fond off stumbling across this agency I found there working practice/style within typography similar to mine. Although they seem more playful in the creation of some of there typefaces but they like to create an image out of letterforms but still create a crisp clean legible finish. This typeface is called 'drop' and definitely emulates the title it has avery fluid feel that represents water and liquids in a playful way that has a certain motion too it. 

Wednesday, 9 October 2013

Design Skills - Alphabet Soup

Studio Brief 1 - Alphabet Soup

To begin the project in terms of context and research I begin my development process by doing a quick mind map on my 2 given words to gather a base of words to gain imagery and generate ideas from.


My favourite words that I feel could prove beneficial to creating ideas for visual solutions are:

Reflections
Geometry
Pivot
Angular
Linear
Proportion 
Repeat

From this Bank of words I will create a word association list to dig deeper into ideas for visual responses through personal responses to the word and research into word origin:

Reflections: Opposite, mirror, distort, ripple, water, illusion
Geometry: Accuracy, circular, measure, astronomy, combination of ancient greek word geo (earth) & metron (measurement), maths
Pivot: Point, rotation, twist, alignment, leverage
Angular: Right angle, 90 180 360 degrees, curve/arc
Linear: Circular (opposite to Linear), square, arrows, dimension, cubic, 2D and 3D
Proportion: Architecture, small to large, leading lines, prospective
Repeat: Re-arrange, layout, splice, cut, manipulate

When looking into the typeface Garamond I discovered a few key points that I found interesting, Claude Garamond was the publisher and designer of the typeface basing the styling of it off old punch-cutters. He was part of an influential movement of type design at the time been one of the leading type designers of that era. The old style serif typeface is seen to be one of the most legible typefaces used in print applications and was used on the 1985 Nintendo console in an italic form and in 1988 The Guardian newspaper redesigned its masthead of its paper to using 'The' in Garamond and 'Guardian' in bold helvetica. A nice contrast of sans serif and serif faces. Unique noticeable points are the small bowl within the 'a' and the small eye of the 'e'. 


en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garamond
Jean Jannon had a part in the version of Garamond you see today altering the letters into more asymmetrical formats and after a raid by the French government on his office Cardinal Richeliu named the type Caractere de l'universite and it became the house style of the Royal Printing office in 1825. A massive fraudulent movement stealing and claiming ownership over something they had no involvement with creating a very controversial history behind it all.  


Typeface anatomy

We had a workshop on typeface anatomy while undergoing a typeface manipulation task using our new found skills within this segment of Graphic Design. Knowing typeface anatomy is important in many ways, it is a language in itself. When describing typefaces and letterforms it is necessary to use the correct terms instead of "the round bit and that bold bit" is far too informal and confusing. 

I have stored this diagram of anatomy here to provide a constant reminder of terms of the elements within letterforms. Terms labeled above don't really need much explaining as the picture presents a clear enough image on this aspect to me.

But important terms I have learnt to be important that are not shown here are the following (to be constantly updated):

Aperture is partially encloses negative space within characters like n, c, s, lower part of an e, upper part of a.