This document outlines 6 experiments conducted using InDesign page layouts with grids. Each experiment is labeled and involves using grids for the page layout in InDesign.
This document lists three final products: posters, a park bench advertisement, and bookmarks. The products appear to be for a class project and include visual designs to promote a cause or idea. In a concise format, the document outlines three deliverables completed by the student.
This document contains 8 recipe cards with information provided on both sides of each card. The front and back of each recipe card is labeled with "Side One" and "Side Two" to indicate the different sides containing recipe information for a total of 8 unique recipes presented across the 8 cards.
Evaluation (print based media and working to brief)savannahryan11
The document discusses Ryan Goldsmith's evaluation of a set of recipe cards he produced for a project. It summarizes the design choices made for the cards, including placing the title, image, method, and ingredients in specific locations. It also discusses using primary colors and fonts to appeal to children. Peer feedback suggested changing the font to improve readability. The project matched the brief of creating recipe cards to promote vegetarian options for children and families. Working in a group required good communication and balancing workloads.
This how-to guide provides simple instructions for making paleo pancakes. The guide uses a muted color palette of greys and features images showing each step of the recipe alongside short, clear instructions in a simple font. The images and formatting help make the recipe easy to follow visually and through short, declarative sentences. The guide aims to provide accurate instructions for readers to interpret and follow as they wish to make the paleo pancakes.
The document summarizes the findings of a primary research questionnaire conducted about homelessness. It describes how the questionnaire was created and distributed online and to friends and family. It then provides details on the 10 questions asked, including demographics of respondents and their opinions on homelessness, homeless people, and supporting homeless charities. The conclusion indicates the questionnaire provided useful information about awareness of a homeless youth charity and attitudes towards helping the homeless.
The document provides feedback on three layout designs: a broadsheet newspaper, tabloid newspaper, and fanzine.
For the broadsheet, the feedback notes that the main headline font is too informal and would be better suited for a tabloid. It also suggests adding more content like advertisements.
Regarding the tabloid, the feedback praises the attention-grabbing headline font and realistic holiday advert design. It notes a minor issue with the number of asterisks used in the headline.
For the fanzine, the feedback appreciates the consistent color scheme, cropped photo style, and title fonts fitting the punk theme. It recommends using a single-colored font for readability and reducing the number of fonts used.
Producing print base media lo2 text analysissavannahryan11
This document summarizes and analyzes several recipe pages and cards from different sources:
1. A Cordon Vert recipe card uses minimal text, high quality images, and colors relating to the featured dish to draw the eye to the focal point.
2. A vegetarian beginners' book uses a lime green background, child-friendly illustrations and fonts, and no images on the recipe page itself to appeal to children.
3. The Vegetarian Society cards use professional photography, varied fonts, and colors relating to the dishes and branding for an older, likely female, audience.
4. One card separates ingredients and method onto different pages for an unusual two-page format.
The document provides a summary and analysis of several charity advertisements and branding materials, including:
- A SASH website that features a smiling young person to challenge stereotypes of homelessness.
- A Shelter online ad showing a family living outside to raise awareness of how easily people can lose their homes.
- A Global Cause ad using a simple image of a red chair against a dark background to draw attention to poverty.
- A Simon on the Streets ad featuring an image of a homeless man to evoke an emotional response and highlight homelessness issues.
- A Spare Room ad using a childlike drawing of a house and bright colors to help young people facing housing instability.
This document lists three final products: posters, a park bench advertisement, and bookmarks. The products appear to be for a class project and include visual designs to promote a cause or idea. In a concise format, the document outlines three deliverables completed by the student.
This document contains 8 recipe cards with information provided on both sides of each card. The front and back of each recipe card is labeled with "Side One" and "Side Two" to indicate the different sides containing recipe information for a total of 8 unique recipes presented across the 8 cards.
Evaluation (print based media and working to brief)savannahryan11
The document discusses Ryan Goldsmith's evaluation of a set of recipe cards he produced for a project. It summarizes the design choices made for the cards, including placing the title, image, method, and ingredients in specific locations. It also discusses using primary colors and fonts to appeal to children. Peer feedback suggested changing the font to improve readability. The project matched the brief of creating recipe cards to promote vegetarian options for children and families. Working in a group required good communication and balancing workloads.
This how-to guide provides simple instructions for making paleo pancakes. The guide uses a muted color palette of greys and features images showing each step of the recipe alongside short, clear instructions in a simple font. The images and formatting help make the recipe easy to follow visually and through short, declarative sentences. The guide aims to provide accurate instructions for readers to interpret and follow as they wish to make the paleo pancakes.
The document summarizes the findings of a primary research questionnaire conducted about homelessness. It describes how the questionnaire was created and distributed online and to friends and family. It then provides details on the 10 questions asked, including demographics of respondents and their opinions on homelessness, homeless people, and supporting homeless charities. The conclusion indicates the questionnaire provided useful information about awareness of a homeless youth charity and attitudes towards helping the homeless.
The document provides feedback on three layout designs: a broadsheet newspaper, tabloid newspaper, and fanzine.
For the broadsheet, the feedback notes that the main headline font is too informal and would be better suited for a tabloid. It also suggests adding more content like advertisements.
Regarding the tabloid, the feedback praises the attention-grabbing headline font and realistic holiday advert design. It notes a minor issue with the number of asterisks used in the headline.
For the fanzine, the feedback appreciates the consistent color scheme, cropped photo style, and title fonts fitting the punk theme. It recommends using a single-colored font for readability and reducing the number of fonts used.
Producing print base media lo2 text analysissavannahryan11
This document summarizes and analyzes several recipe pages and cards from different sources:
1. A Cordon Vert recipe card uses minimal text, high quality images, and colors relating to the featured dish to draw the eye to the focal point.
2. A vegetarian beginners' book uses a lime green background, child-friendly illustrations and fonts, and no images on the recipe page itself to appeal to children.
3. The Vegetarian Society cards use professional photography, varied fonts, and colors relating to the dishes and branding for an older, likely female, audience.
4. One card separates ingredients and method onto different pages for an unusual two-page format.
The document provides a summary and analysis of several charity advertisements and branding materials, including:
- A SASH website that features a smiling young person to challenge stereotypes of homelessness.
- A Shelter online ad showing a family living outside to raise awareness of how easily people can lose their homes.
- A Global Cause ad using a simple image of a red chair against a dark background to draw attention to poverty.
- A Simon on the Streets ad featuring an image of a homeless man to evoke an emotional response and highlight homelessness issues.
- A Spare Room ad using a childlike drawing of a house and bright colors to help young people facing housing instability.
The document discusses an advertising campaign created for the charity SASH to prevent youth homelessness. The campaign includes three products: a bookmark, park bench advertisement, and two posters. The author believes the products are fit for purpose because they relate to the charity's goals, use bright colors to catch attention, and look cohesive as part of the same campaign. The products are also deemed appropriate for the target 16-24 year old audience through use of engaging fonts, colors, and simple designs. However, the author notes the products could more clearly communicate the charity's message and services provided.
This document contains 6 mood boards created for charity products for the organization SASH. Mood board one establishes a green color scheme with variations and addition of red and blue. Mood board two features images of happy families to convey positive messages. Mood board three uses images depicting different types of homelessness. Mood board four showcases sans-serif fonts that are clear and readable. Mood board five features serif fonts that stand out and draw attention. Mood board six combines texts, images, and colors from the previous boards to represent a unified set of products.
The document discusses resubmitting a brainstorming assignment for a social action course. It contains ideas for improving an initial brainstorming submission by focusing the ideas into specific, actionable proposals that could create positive change in the community. The revised submission should outline concrete plans with clear goals and steps that are feasible to implement.
The document lists 4 final products: a poster, park bench advert, bookmark, and social action for LO3 resubmissions. These appear to be creative works or community engagement projects turned in for a class.
This document appears to be a record of recipe card submissions by Savannah Hardwick, showing an original design that was refined followed by multiple resubmissions with new designs until an unknown final submission.
This document summarizes Savannah Hardwick's evaluation of her final project where she created three print products - a broadsheet front cover, tabloid front cover, and fanzine. Savannah feels she managed her time well to complete all tasks on schedule. She reviewed her work in progress to ensure it met the briefs and looked like real products. Savannah learned new skills using InDesign and tailored each product to its target audience. Overall, she believes the finished products met her goals and showed the development of her technical, creative, and time management skills.
The document provides feedback on designs for different newspaper layouts: a broadsheet, tabloid, and fanzine.
For the broadsheet design, the feedback notes that the main headline font is too informal and would be better suited for a tabloid. It also suggests adding more content like advertisements.
Regarding the tabloid design, the feedback praises the attention-grabbing headline font but notes a minor issue with the number of asterisks used.
For the fanzine designs, the feedback appreciates the consistent color scheme and cropped photo style. However, it suggests using a clearer font color and reducing the number of fonts for better readability.
This document contains sections on existing punk fanzines, style sheets for fonts and images, flat plans or layouts for a fanzine, and experiments in designing a fanzine. It includes research on punk fanzines, guidelines for typography and visual design, mockups of fanzine pages, and work samples from developing a fanzine concept.
Savannah Hardwick created experiments for a tabloid front cover layout. She designed style sheets for fonts used in the masthead, headlines, and copy. Flat plans were made for different sections. The document describes her first experiment with a tabloid front cover layout that uses a bold headline, colorful masthead, and holiday advertisement to catch readers' attention. Savannah was happy with the overall layout and bold headline that draws readers into the story.
This document discusses the process of designing a broadsheet newspaper page layout. It includes examples of style sheets and flat plans that were created. The author notes that their first attempt at a layout was difficult to work with and they disliked the image placement. They experimented with different designs before settling on a final layout that did not use a flat plan but instead placed elements within basic grid guides. The author notes some elements like the large image could be improved and provides an overview of their final broadsheet design.
This document summarizes an experimental photography student's photomontage projects. For the first project, the student created a photomontage from photos of an artistic map, experimenting with brightness, saturation, and adding a blue stroke around each layer. They moved the images to distort the original image. For the second project, the student was inspired by David Hockney's photomontages and created one from photos of a corridor at different angles and layers. The student evaluated their work and discussed technical qualities like post-production techniques as well as areas for improvement such as composition and original photo quality.
This document outlines 9 experiments conducted as part of a task. Each experiment is given its own header but no other details are provided about the purpose, methods, or results of the individual experiments. The document provides only a high-level structure with experiment headers but no other substantive information.
This document discusses 4 experiments related to a factual page layout task. Each experiment is given a heading but no other details are provided about the purpose, methods, or results of the individual experiments. The document provides a high-level structure but lacks specifics about the content and outcomes of the experiments.
This document outlines the layout elements for different types of publications, including magazine double page spreads, newspaper front covers, and magazine double page spreads. It identifies common elements such as grids, columns, headlines, pull quotes, captions, and white space that structure the content and flow of information across pages. Standard design conventions like orientation, margins, and baselines are also noted to achieve a coherent aesthetic across a publication.
This document summarizes a how-to guide for making paleo pancakes. The guide uses simple images and minimal text written in an informal register. The color palette is muted greys and the images are emphasized with grey borders. Important text like the title and ingredients are written in a darker, capitalized grey to stand out. Overall, the guide has a simple, easy-to-follow design to clearly instruct readers on the paleo pancake recipe.
The document summarizes the student's experimental photography assignments exploring photomontage techniques. For the first image, the student manipulated brightness, saturation, and added a blue stroke around layered images of a map. They found this abstract approach most successful. The second image aimed to emulate David Hockney's style by layering corridor photos and editing colors. For the third, the student created a Hockney-inspired grid with individual square manipulations like opacity and overlays. Overall, the assignments explored locations through photomontage, with influences from Hockney, to fulfill the theme of discovery through experimental photography.
The student plans to create photomontages using images taken around York College from February 5th-7th 2014 with a Canon EOS Rebel T3i DSLR camera. The images will be of various locations on and around campus and will be combined in Photoshop using the photomontage technique to rearrange the scenes in disjointed or collaged compositions. The goal is to create three images - one where the location is clearly visible, one where it is less clear, and one that is highly disjointed and unclear. Mixed media may also be added to the printed photomontages. Post-production work like manually moving images and altering colors will be done to further disjoint some of the images. A variety
The document summarizes Savannah Hardwick's mood boards and proposal for a photography project on the theme of discovery. It includes:
1) Four mood boards focused on animals, religion, locations, and food to explore themes and ideas.
2) A proposal to shoot photos of varying locations around college, both interior and exterior, to experiment with photomontage techniques like those of David Hockney.
3) The goal is to create photomontages with college locations that are clearly recognizable, somewhat recognizable, and abstract, potentially adding mixed media elements.
The document contains 4 mood boards created by Savannah Hardwick exploring potential themes for a photography project on discovery. The first mood board focuses on animals and features close-up images of colorful and exotic animals. The second mood board explores the theme of religion using symbols of different religions and images of people praying. The third mood board is based on locations and contains diverse landscape and scenic images from around the world. The fourth and final mood board examines the theme of food using vibrant photos of foods like fruits, vegetables and fast food.
The document summarizes photography experiments the author conducted using different techniques: out of focus, movement, photomontage, and reflections. For the out of focus technique, the author found blurrier images looked better in brighter areas. They produced abstract images blending colors. For movement, they captured legs in motion using long exposures and camera movement. Their reflection images featured multiple mirrored views and colorful reflections that transformed ordinary subjects.
The document discusses an advertising campaign created for the charity SASH to prevent youth homelessness. The campaign includes three products: a bookmark, park bench advertisement, and two posters. The author believes the products are fit for purpose because they relate to the charity's goals, use bright colors to catch attention, and look cohesive as part of the same campaign. The products are also deemed appropriate for the target 16-24 year old audience through use of engaging fonts, colors, and simple designs. However, the author notes the products could more clearly communicate the charity's message and services provided.
This document contains 6 mood boards created for charity products for the organization SASH. Mood board one establishes a green color scheme with variations and addition of red and blue. Mood board two features images of happy families to convey positive messages. Mood board three uses images depicting different types of homelessness. Mood board four showcases sans-serif fonts that are clear and readable. Mood board five features serif fonts that stand out and draw attention. Mood board six combines texts, images, and colors from the previous boards to represent a unified set of products.
The document discusses resubmitting a brainstorming assignment for a social action course. It contains ideas for improving an initial brainstorming submission by focusing the ideas into specific, actionable proposals that could create positive change in the community. The revised submission should outline concrete plans with clear goals and steps that are feasible to implement.
The document lists 4 final products: a poster, park bench advert, bookmark, and social action for LO3 resubmissions. These appear to be creative works or community engagement projects turned in for a class.
This document appears to be a record of recipe card submissions by Savannah Hardwick, showing an original design that was refined followed by multiple resubmissions with new designs until an unknown final submission.
This document summarizes Savannah Hardwick's evaluation of her final project where she created three print products - a broadsheet front cover, tabloid front cover, and fanzine. Savannah feels she managed her time well to complete all tasks on schedule. She reviewed her work in progress to ensure it met the briefs and looked like real products. Savannah learned new skills using InDesign and tailored each product to its target audience. Overall, she believes the finished products met her goals and showed the development of her technical, creative, and time management skills.
The document provides feedback on designs for different newspaper layouts: a broadsheet, tabloid, and fanzine.
For the broadsheet design, the feedback notes that the main headline font is too informal and would be better suited for a tabloid. It also suggests adding more content like advertisements.
Regarding the tabloid design, the feedback praises the attention-grabbing headline font but notes a minor issue with the number of asterisks used.
For the fanzine designs, the feedback appreciates the consistent color scheme and cropped photo style. However, it suggests using a clearer font color and reducing the number of fonts for better readability.
This document contains sections on existing punk fanzines, style sheets for fonts and images, flat plans or layouts for a fanzine, and experiments in designing a fanzine. It includes research on punk fanzines, guidelines for typography and visual design, mockups of fanzine pages, and work samples from developing a fanzine concept.
Savannah Hardwick created experiments for a tabloid front cover layout. She designed style sheets for fonts used in the masthead, headlines, and copy. Flat plans were made for different sections. The document describes her first experiment with a tabloid front cover layout that uses a bold headline, colorful masthead, and holiday advertisement to catch readers' attention. Savannah was happy with the overall layout and bold headline that draws readers into the story.
This document discusses the process of designing a broadsheet newspaper page layout. It includes examples of style sheets and flat plans that were created. The author notes that their first attempt at a layout was difficult to work with and they disliked the image placement. They experimented with different designs before settling on a final layout that did not use a flat plan but instead placed elements within basic grid guides. The author notes some elements like the large image could be improved and provides an overview of their final broadsheet design.
This document summarizes an experimental photography student's photomontage projects. For the first project, the student created a photomontage from photos of an artistic map, experimenting with brightness, saturation, and adding a blue stroke around each layer. They moved the images to distort the original image. For the second project, the student was inspired by David Hockney's photomontages and created one from photos of a corridor at different angles and layers. The student evaluated their work and discussed technical qualities like post-production techniques as well as areas for improvement such as composition and original photo quality.
This document outlines 9 experiments conducted as part of a task. Each experiment is given its own header but no other details are provided about the purpose, methods, or results of the individual experiments. The document provides only a high-level structure with experiment headers but no other substantive information.
This document discusses 4 experiments related to a factual page layout task. Each experiment is given a heading but no other details are provided about the purpose, methods, or results of the individual experiments. The document provides a high-level structure but lacks specifics about the content and outcomes of the experiments.
This document outlines the layout elements for different types of publications, including magazine double page spreads, newspaper front covers, and magazine double page spreads. It identifies common elements such as grids, columns, headlines, pull quotes, captions, and white space that structure the content and flow of information across pages. Standard design conventions like orientation, margins, and baselines are also noted to achieve a coherent aesthetic across a publication.
This document summarizes a how-to guide for making paleo pancakes. The guide uses simple images and minimal text written in an informal register. The color palette is muted greys and the images are emphasized with grey borders. Important text like the title and ingredients are written in a darker, capitalized grey to stand out. Overall, the guide has a simple, easy-to-follow design to clearly instruct readers on the paleo pancake recipe.
The document summarizes the student's experimental photography assignments exploring photomontage techniques. For the first image, the student manipulated brightness, saturation, and added a blue stroke around layered images of a map. They found this abstract approach most successful. The second image aimed to emulate David Hockney's style by layering corridor photos and editing colors. For the third, the student created a Hockney-inspired grid with individual square manipulations like opacity and overlays. Overall, the assignments explored locations through photomontage, with influences from Hockney, to fulfill the theme of discovery through experimental photography.
The student plans to create photomontages using images taken around York College from February 5th-7th 2014 with a Canon EOS Rebel T3i DSLR camera. The images will be of various locations on and around campus and will be combined in Photoshop using the photomontage technique to rearrange the scenes in disjointed or collaged compositions. The goal is to create three images - one where the location is clearly visible, one where it is less clear, and one that is highly disjointed and unclear. Mixed media may also be added to the printed photomontages. Post-production work like manually moving images and altering colors will be done to further disjoint some of the images. A variety
The document summarizes Savannah Hardwick's mood boards and proposal for a photography project on the theme of discovery. It includes:
1) Four mood boards focused on animals, religion, locations, and food to explore themes and ideas.
2) A proposal to shoot photos of varying locations around college, both interior and exterior, to experiment with photomontage techniques like those of David Hockney.
3) The goal is to create photomontages with college locations that are clearly recognizable, somewhat recognizable, and abstract, potentially adding mixed media elements.
The document contains 4 mood boards created by Savannah Hardwick exploring potential themes for a photography project on discovery. The first mood board focuses on animals and features close-up images of colorful and exotic animals. The second mood board explores the theme of religion using symbols of different religions and images of people praying. The third mood board is based on locations and contains diverse landscape and scenic images from around the world. The fourth and final mood board examines the theme of food using vibrant photos of foods like fruits, vegetables and fast food.
The document summarizes photography experiments the author conducted using different techniques: out of focus, movement, photomontage, and reflections. For the out of focus technique, the author found blurrier images looked better in brighter areas. They produced abstract images blending colors. For movement, they captured legs in motion using long exposures and camera movement. Their reflection images featured multiple mirrored views and colorful reflections that transformed ordinary subjects.