Sunday, November 20, 2011

Type I Poster Design



For typography, I had to design an informational poster about a type.  I chose American Typewriter, as I felt going too weird would have distracted the viewer in general, but felt that this was way more unique and heavier than say Courier, or similar "type" fonts.
I had to make five sketches where the class gave me feedback.  My two strongest were slight variations of the above, in which I took further than their originals of course.
The first one was laid out using a grid method, save for the enormous A, which I treated as a non-grid graphic element to line up type against in a new grid.  I felt this made the appropriate juxtapose I was looking for in the overall design, albiet a bit more subtle than the second piece.
The second poster utilized grunge elements, particularly the paint splatter, non grid format, and the skewed line work.  I treated some type elements a little off kilter to further add to the overall grunge effect.  I think this played nicely against the subject typeface as it is a decently clean old style.  The juxtapose here working to make this font almost grimy.

Saturday, October 29, 2011

photo-a-day 2 20/20


Here is a little trick I thought of myself.  I wasn't too sure if it would work, but it did the first time I tried it here.  I wouldn't be surprised if someone else may have done this before, but it's all in the wrist.  The gray sky behind the buildings caused the overall composition to look black and white, when in fact it is color.  I'm glad this is was the case as I feel too much color would take away from the overall effect.

prints

Thursday, October 27, 2011

photo-a-day 2 19/20


Another cool thing about Detroit's downtown is this mixture of old and new.  I found this best illustrated here.  I took a good strong under angle to help illustrate the immensity of these structures, but also made sure I captured their interaction in the same swoop.  Luckily there was a monorail line as well to be included in the frame.

prints

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

photo-a-day 2 18/20


Detroit has some amazing architecture in the downtown area.  I find this one to be on e of the better buildings I have encountered inside and out.  It reminds me of one of those mega structures that one would find in a scifi novel.  I wanted to illustrate it's symmetry both in the structure itself and the reflections of the outer towers on the center one.  The sky was a nice cloudy one, to offer less interference and for greater concentration on the subject at hand.

prints

Sunday, October 23, 2011

photo-a-day 2 17/20


The added depth of a simplest silhouette was intended to function on a multiple levels.  Power lines always make for great movement in a photo that would be too still if it were just clouds.  They also cut up the frame random sections of smaller frames.  And there is the opposed western movement, with the power lines starting lower in the composition and splitting eye movement into two different directions of up and down.  Viewers who read from left to right tend to view art the same way.

prints

Thursday, October 20, 2011

photo-a-day 2 16/30


Risking getting hit by a car I took this today.  What compelled me to take the shot when traffic was busiest must have been the sun glint off the rails, an ooh shiny moment.  I wish I had a little more time to change the focus a hair up the frame, but for off the hip I like this plenty fine.  I was attempting a great deal of depth and I think the complex subject made it very easy.  Fresh rain on the street has always been a very appealing thing to me, and what has attracted to me to stay in the pacific northwest.

prints

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

photo-a-day 2 15/20


As much as a self portrait one would be able to get out of me utilizing this media.  Even thought that was not primary result of this, I was still aware that my image would inevitably buried amongst all the lines of both the elevator shaft and the reflection.  If I remember correctly there was a little construction going on behind me, hence the large truck.  If you step back from the detail though, it as if I created a plaid out of reflection and object.

prints