Monday 20 May 2013

OUGD505 - Design Practice 2 - Self Evaluation

End of Module Self Evaluation



OUGD505 - What is Good - Public Response

I have begun to receive some positive feedback about the invites that were sent out into the public domain, the target audience has to be specified as both male and females as my brief stated families in the target audience. However it is most often the case that the females always respond or are most likley to take note of the invites. 



The client is happy with how things are coming along, this brief has consumed the overall planning for the event and upon reflection I should have been much more strict with the bride in order to keep to deadlines. 




Only four back so far, however this is a good start to the wedding event. 



OUGD505 - What is Good - Presentation Boards

Boards



Friday 17 May 2013

OUGD505 - What is Good - Guest Book

Guest Book

As part of furthering my product range for the event I have produced a book from scratch at the Vernon Street site using book binder Sarah's tutorials. It has been incredibly rewarding and left me wondering why I have not done this over the past 2 years. The process is slow but came cheap at just £2.70 for all the materials and tutors time. 


Test shots of the book show the embossing on the front, this was tested on a piece of card first to ensure the whole thing did not squash too far before placing in the leafs. 


Detailing shows the embossing, Ben McKenna from 3rd year showed me his work on a DVD box set where he embossed over the book lining, working along side several 3rd year students at Vernon helped me realise my potential with this brief and I will definitely be using the site more over the course of the summer and 3rd year. 





The bone folders I used help pronounce the spine of the book, making it look of professional standard which is important. This book will be used at the wedding therefore it will need to be durable and last the tests of time. 


My research showed that there are going to be a number of children at the reception, there is also a generally younger audience of mid twenties attending therefore I felt it a good design decision to add a section on each DPS for a drawing, any guest can doodle or play in the book for the bride and groom to take away and laugh over. 



The stitching method that I used for the research booklet has directly influenced my final piece, this helped incredibly as it is the first time I have stitched. Originally I wanted to Japanese stitch the entire book but upon reflection and advice from Sarah it was decided that this method would be much more durable in the hands of about 100 people. 



Thursday 16 May 2013

OUGD505 - What is good - Napkin rings

Napkin rings provide a great way of instantly accessing the Pinterest link, after my research I considered the accessibility of Pinterest and the fact that most of the guests will be technologically illiterate or unaware of the existence of this type of website. 

I chose Pinterest as it is the most user friendly for novices and already has a strong design so my time can be spent getting people to access it rather than designing it. 


Sketches



Design Progress






In context



The QR code gets direct mobile access to the Pin-Board that is to be used, guests can then deviate from the board (which the couple also pin stuff they like to) onto the other craft based images and boards. 










The nature of Pinterest allows you to click through to the original web pages and guests can pick up craft ideas from there, thus sharing the world of craft with everyone at the wedding. 





Saturday 11 May 2013

OUGD505 - Exhibition poster

Mind explosion

With a quick turn around, I have let my head wander into the far reaches, this is a competition between peers and therefore I want to stand out using uncommon materials for an exhibition space. 

(sketches)


My research has led me to the point where I know that I can use an idea of abandonment through a piece of wood or vinyl which would cover the entire frame, showing a sense of a derelict area under redevelopment. 


(3 concepts)

The concepts were received well in the crit, the wood poster was highly praised in relation to the other ideas. I will be working with the wood idea as I believe it has a much better impact on the space as a whole.

There is limitations of using the 3D aspect in this brief such as cost to the course for providing several pieces of wood and the process of fixing them to the frames without damage. The process used would have to be ink or vinyl stickers. 





(improved idea)



Futura used for the impact it has, the weight of the type allows for easier screen printing onto the uneven surface of the wood. There is also  a risk with thin weight type for the ink to absorb and bleed into the wood grain. 

The copywriting I have used reflects the idea of a derelict area which no-one uses anymore, the area is under development and will be revealed to the public soon. 





The photograph of the wood came out grainy and the nature of the wood is very dark therefore I will be changing the wood for the background image. 

Final resolution


In context





Final crit & judging

For the final crit I had concluded that I could not afford the £25 from B&Q for a piece of particle board, therefore I chose to use the digital print facility and use a very high resolution image. This proved to be effective as I had one of the only responses at A1 size. Technologically the piece of work is low-fi and has maximum impact for a lower cost for the course to provide. 

I think that in comparison to other directions that were taken on this brief my design decisions had much more of an impact on the social space. 


Result and Evaluation

Unfortunately I did not get in the final 7 places, however I feel as thought if I had bought the piece of wood and used vinyl lettering to mock the piece up further I would have made more of a memorable impact. 

By exploring this side of graphic design, I think that my practice has improved in terms of communication of a message, I stayed away from the computer for the majority of the briefs duration, only using InDesign for the type layout. After much deliberation and the research that I carried out, I appreciate outlook on visual comunication and typography as a way of conveying a message. 

Wednesday 8 May 2013

OUGD505 - What is good - construction

I will be providing the client with 2 versions of her invites at a budget of under 50p per invite. This is an incredibly tight budget and therefore my finish pieces for the reception will be a lower cost run. The second batch for the ceremony guests will reflect a luxury crafted pieces given a higher split of the budget. 

Budget Invite set After about 8 hours of cutting by hand, everything is cut and ready for construction, the one I make for my hand in will differ because these had a budget of 45p each, certain aspects such as double sided printing and flocking, foiling etc had to be axed from the brief.



The first instinct for the client was to receive off white or cream invites using the colour on the print rather than the card, after testing the results for the ivory pantone it became apparent that these files would be difficult to get correct without clashing with the pink. 







Fitting 10 of each set of bunting allows for maximum print for less cost, for the printers sake I named each file "three of these" etc and placed a reminder on each print. 


As each invite needed to be tailored for the amount of guests coming at the request of the client I simply had to multiply each version and mix the variation of the designs to still fit as many as possible onto one sheert,  this was very time consuming and became hard to track which ones had been added and which I had left to print. 




Sending these screen shots as a digital proof to the client helped before going to print. 






The budget invites came out real well, the stock was a Epson matt 230GSM from a leeds based printers that only prints on this card stock for its crisp white nature.





Finalised "Luxury" invites
I have booked slots for the bookbinding areas and vernon street copper etching areas in order to begin construction of the final set of invites to the ceremony. 

The studio sessions provided me with a look at what quality of work my peers are producing .. and project management skills.




Finalised proofs tested on greyscale help gauge the final scale of them before going to print. 


To keep costs low on a larger scale run, I have combined the piece of the invite as best as possible onto A4 sheets using crop marks. 

The date
Emphasis on the date of the wedding is important to the client as it is her "big day" therefore the blind embossing of the date will feature as a point of focus. Making a copper embossing plate will allow me to carry the message of the day of summer celebration through all of the ephemera. 

Testing the emboss on the card to see what pressure is needed in the machine, thicker card only needs around 1000PS, thinner weight stocks such as the envelope need much higher up to 5000. I have found that on the thinner stocker, the best way to gauge the pressure is that when the dial reaches 12 O'clock then it is pretty much done. 


The envelope came out as I expected, the lines are clean and my registration set up was perfect for it to fall inline with the point in the envelope. This will line up with the wax seal for a perfect alignment. 


The date needs to carry through into the invites therefore I have included them in twice inside, the RSVP sits between the blind emboss on the folder across the flap, metaphorically asking the recipients to be a part of the day. 

The registration here is off centre but I am really pleased with he quality of the pressing and adds to the craft feel of the invite. This is yet to be stuck to the folder but I has primarily threaded the bunting through this section of card also. 
Before I begin the finally construction I have tested the opening of the invite and it works very well, the bunting took a long time to place correctly so that it does not hang low. 






These colours of envelopes were used as a test run for colour matching, they do not reflect any level of sophistication for the ceremony therefore I have chosen a Plum/Burgundy colour at the same expense.


The final RSVP's are as the client requested (love hearts tick boxes and all) and I have produced them single sided to keep the costs of print down. I was sceptical about the pink not suiting the darker plum colour but I feel that it works when you see it in the physical form.