Monday, December 19, 2016

Studio Brief 1:Design Production Evaluation

The design production outcome is a product of a large range of tested design decisions that encapsulate the theme of neon lights in the night through it's photopaper-like reflective cover encapsulating the theme of light in black and the method of photographing, a typeface that represents the function of neon signage in forms of tubes, an exciting use of glow in the dark as a miniature feature and the well recognised and established symbol of Manchester which this part of a 'series' is all based.

From the beginning, through research and found admiration of enticing and dramatic picture books, choosing to produce a visual publication with a high contrast between the glow of the neon signage in the night time set the theme for the accompaniments of the production. After print tests of the images fully blown and double spread, the glossy stock gave the images a glamorous showcased feel which neon signage can be associated to in terms of nightlife usage and Vegas/bar references, whether people feel they are used in glamour purposes tacky or not, I wanted the publication to feel very sophisticated and showcase the illumination of the letters I photographed in Manchester town centre.
Having the quote as the introductory set the personal ambiguity of the photo book and instantly alludes the reader to the glow of the neon signage's, and is made fluorescent pink to blend in to the content being one of the colours in my photographs but still in the tube styled typeface used on the cover.

As well as glossy stock within, a magazine size and a step up from the 4x6 photo size my images were developed as were printed and showed within crits, and stepping away from a magazine feel and having my page sizes as an actual 5x7 photo size displayed the type and mysterious detailing of the locations well and related to my film camera theme. As the photographs are mainly black due to contrast and level adjustments to my original photographs, I felt also having my publication magazine sized and more of a coffee table book was unnecessary.

As for the cover there were many struggles and adjustments, which went from a hardback cover using greyboard to whiteboard for a lighter feel, to in the end not having a hardback as with that it would feel less of a creative photobook and more of a serious, text heavy publication, therefore I steered away from this last minute as it didn't feel correct. Neither did using bookcloth as my material for the front cover;although previously justified and related to the location of Manchester's industrial revolution of cotton where the worker bee on the front originated from, it felt too much like a text heavy old style book. Although this could have worked if my photographs were more unedited, this publication is a modern take on the views of neon signage in the modern busy city centre illuminating the glowing colours and more available typefaces and possibilities of neon signage than there were originally (which I found within research). This publication having a modern feel became evermore important and clear as experiments with the cover went on and the clear style relation of the photos within which I was really happy with, needed to be reflected on the cover and the covers production.

The saddle-stitch binding was where I could tie in the relation to Manchester's infamous mills past by using thread and a more durable option for where I was producing the publication. Although tests were done with perfect bind and were successful, I was unsure of durability with it not being done professionally. These binding methods were favoured as they display the images within the publications fully and although mostly black, having the full bleed images are important for the dramatic effect and the attraction I want the creatives eyes to glue to the fluorescence of the signage's. If done professionally, saddle-stitch would have still been the choice but using a genuine cotton thread to celebrate the origin of the photographs and resonate with the full symbol on the front cover.

As this publication's target audience is creatives such as photographers or graphic designs, and lovers of items more quirky, distributed in Manchester's creative hub of the Northern Quarter in shops such as Fred Aldous and Magma, my excitement and focus of the cover was to make it stand out on a book shelf.Between ideas of a fluorescent glow in the dark cover or a complete glow bar on the spine, I finally settled on an all black cover with black page edges (which I had seen on a book in our library which had such a unique attraction) and a humorous title which I felt would appeal to my target audience, 'Get Lit' Manchester version in tube type which glows in the dark. I feel a title like this would grab attention to those interested in neon signage or not, and if displayed cover forward, the large bee would be ambiguous and mysterious such as the style of my photographs inside, and give visitors whether they be Mancunian or not, a will to pick it up due to pride of the city.

The covers material was chosen as it was sturdy enough for a casing of the photographs, yet also replicated a photographs texture and reflective feature. Despite this meaning marks can be made easily this would prompt buyers to look after the book as they would their own photographs (which I want my publication to prompt people to take of neon signage, which is the reason for 'film's not dead' a popular hashtag of my target audience online) and due to the unique design features of the publication such as neon and fluorescent inks, all black pages and a lot of mystery and ambiguity, the focus is on the lights and having the reflective surface of the front cover celebrates that to reflect whatever colour/type of light wherever the person is. The publication feels personal, like a photograph, and has features a creative can appreciate as it is a visual publication.



Personally, design production has been the most challenging brief to date due to the very practical side of it. Grasping bookmaking and all the options for it was quite boggling, and my determination to incorporate fluorescent and glow in the dark inks with all the screenprint mistakes happening with my first time was disheartening at times but the design production decisions were right for the publication. Reprinting and getting screenprints wrong was quite annoying, time consuming and cost every time, however I know the capabilities of other printers elsewhere and I know this publication would be easy to recreate professionally in a professional binding and printing distributor as the photo-size, inks, and binding were all attainable for me, just putting them together by hand was a challenge.

If recreated professionally, ideally I would want a glossy stock that doesn't crease and mark as well as the stocks used together in this publication which would be off-putting as a new book to a new customer. The binding would be of course tighter, measurements of pages and cover more perfected, the glow stronger and preferably waxed and bevelled to reduce the ink rubbing off due to wear, and the fluorescent ink inside and all inks on the front a lot tidier which a machine could do easily.

I feel I have produced a quite quirky, personal, mysterious publication which would hopefully ignite creatives of Manchester to appreciate what the city has to offer visually and to capture these moments, hopefully collecting and shooting film as there is a surge in analog currently which I have witnessed in both Leeds and Manchester among the creative types that I know. The design production  would be replicated by professionals for many reprints easily as the decisions are distinct and match well to the content.

Tuesday, December 13, 2016

'Records' Alec Aarons exhibition September

Another example of how vinyls comeback and target audience age range is forever widening and becoming more of interest again




This exhibtion was curated at The Brunswick by fellow LCA student Alec, demonstrated how far you can take your work if you are passionate enough about it and the array of visitors it can attract. Although it was a simple layout, a lot of time and effort had been put in to it and a lot of thought, the vinyl player and the records to put on for example was a brilliant touch. It is encouraging and I definetly want to attend fellow students exhibits to build community and links to local creatives, and that just showing your work publicly wether it be at a venue or online, you are going to attract audiences you couldn't imagine.


Monday, December 5, 2016

Start of designing for screen


Typefaces

-Blunt stiff pen used on photoshop to mimic typically drawn tabs identifying genres and a-z in record stores and personal human touch
-vinylcuts/vinylstickons type too decorative as body text and make interface look less mature and marker pen arrow has potential of not being legible and not being appropriate for mature users


-dj fonts typeface for legible universal vinyl symbols, appropriate for international users of the website. website must be universally recognised as a vinyl marketplace with non bias layout and inspo from typical record store layouts and features
-use helvetica as it is the most legible and universal typeface which is well known, and will have no issue for the older audience


Layout

-static menu, scrolling recommendations of just uploaded adjusted to your purchase and search histories, which sidescroll more like browsing a record store
-it has been suggested I recreate the stacks like Windows Vista but I feel this would be very offputting and time consuming considering my audience and the initial problem of it being time consuming and messy



-Hover over vinyl artwork was favoured for minimalist layout and less mess of text which is an issue with Discogs marketplace identified
-To give the most correct mimic of the randomizer, I used Discogs switching up specifications and copied and pasted random vinyls up for sale to display the range of genres, styles and artworks showing the magnitude of the uploads and usage. No more would be built up than the ones stacked, would be discarded in the design.


Notes from discussions with various peers and curator of the 'Records' exhibition.


FIRST WIREFRAMES, TWO INTERFACE LAYOUT IDEAS



-was the favoured layout in feedback as peers felt the artwork would be more of the eyes focus as the top isnt taken up by the menu and title
-large easy to see search bar for non confusing, direct searching which is an improvement on the clunk confusion of Discogs marketplace
-notifications for a Wishlist for passionate collectors in the corner can be transferable to mobile alerts and is agreed this is ideal for Discogs audiences as there are many collectors/businesses and those wanting to invest in valuable vinyl
-keeping the layout simple and images gridded was favoured, as was the multiway scrollbars which I was surprised at
-less menu options as too many are overwhelming which is an inital problem of the Discogs marketplace

-tab feature, alike to the search tabs in record stores was praised, but again too many menu buttons
-this is where I displayed the quick view/hover intention which was said to be a valuable part based on the fastness and efficiency I want to create with this interface
-as an initial visit to the page, having latest for sale will display the vast variety of vinyls on the site to a first time user and jumps straight in, as record stores do, with artworks in your face as soon as you enter. although I want to create a simplistic interface, the excitement needs to be kept to be relatable to the stores and draw in the other half of the vinyl buyers who have no interest in using Discogs marketplace which in feedback has been called 'messy', 'clunky' and 'diluted' with no visual resemblance to record stores.

Record store exploration and vinyl spots



A flyer that caught my attention in the LCA corridor, checked to see if it was more competition but it is a new music magazine which has just started out with interviews, articles, and very artistic content and a best of 2016 spotify playlist. Probably curated by someone at LCA, this reinforces how much vinyl is coming back and that it has a relevance among students aswell as those who have been collecting for decades showing the mass target audience my new interface caters for.

Jumbo Records



Multiple stacks everywhere you look, record stores have so much to offer 



Visuals of branding, gig flyers, covers everywhere you look. It is an exciting atmosphere.



Relics Records


Very similar layouts, and as I have seen going to stores before and in the Record exhibition I attended in September, these places are all very similar and have a universal style.




Just opened record and coffee store, again reiterating the comeback of vinyl.





Stickers and flyers everywhere, prompts me to move forward with making the new interface more visual but not as cluttered. Record stores are enjoyed this way, but to solve my problem, my interface needs to be clear and straight to the point. Making the experience more visually striking and focused on the album artwork is crucial, but having stickers in the background may be too immature. Will have to try this.



Magazines on a coffee table left for customers to read, and Discogs has a main feature on the first showing its prevalence within the vinyl buying community. With the marketplace being made one large area and made easier to navigate and more visual, it would have a huge following as Discogs definetley has proved it does through my research



Vinyl spots



First was a stall at an Etsy market at the Leeds City Museum who created items such as notebooks and earrings out of vinyls; was a very quirky idea which worked brilliantly and showed appeal with the dozens of customers hovering and buying at this counter. The second is at On The Wall, a print shop which had these vinyl cards. Little spots like these on my travels around Leeds reinforced that the vinyl community is huge and currently only seems to be growing, making my problem seem even more relevant and that what I am creating has a mass purpose not only in Leeds but internationally due to statistics given on Discogs of different currencies.

Thursday, December 1, 2016

Responsive crit feedback

Points raised with my thirsty planet direction

Making this moodboard for the crit has made visualising other design ideas so much easier, and the general feedback about it was positive and that it fit to the target audience of 18-24 yo's who unfortunately, are attracted to what is aesthetically pleasing as most are busy and finding a strong sense of their style. This is why I implemented the palm leaves as they are a current trend amongst young adult, bloggers particularly.


my example edits of my painted colour schemed waves overlayed with monoprints and palm leaves

-'textures create interest,more tactile and likely to be picked up'- useful if there were to be flyers or other products sold, would buy because of the design over a simple one in some cases
-'colour,texture,motion and vibrancy are going to be a fundamental part of the response. Consider how effective attention grabbing copy could and should enhance the message. Look in to the new Spotify campaign.'

-'this one can have a direct impact, nature>engaging>textures>craft>ethnic art. Look at clothing of villages,materials, scale. projected imagery,wrapping buildings in colour scheme, events,sponsors,experiences,would would it impact.
-'the phrases demand the viewers attention and the use of uppercase sans serif typography creates an effective juxtaposition with the textured colourful background'
-'phrases work well'
-'the phrases are unique and leave you wanting to know more'
-'phrases are distinct, they make a strong impact'
-'they grab my attention-makes it exciting!'

When asked how shall i simplify, suggestions were to change the text to white for more legibility or transparent to show water behind. I then asked what else people would find useful to create for a succesfull campaign...
-'credit card size vouchers?'
-'smaller handout prints'
'billboards and print material
-'really bright and engaging with the young adult/student audience'

'consider a minimum of 2/3 more phrases for it to act as a campaign,try a range of colours. Animation may add personality'- ideally I would prefer to have an animated campaign, but the program software isn't something I adapted to easily and struggled with a lot.


Adobe 'Show what you know'


friendship, fun, youth, vibrancy, edgy, memories, party, drunk,movement, colour, music, individuality, friendship
was suggested I add sketchy outlines to add movement and energy to the specifications of what image is implying influenced by the disclosure album covers

in feedback, the describing words for the images came out perhaps like i should have expected, about parties and memories rather than the deeper meanings tied to each image as it is hard to extract out.
Displeased nobody got the 'rabbit in the headlights' vibe from number 3 as its very relevant for student life, I knew this direction wouldn't work in the way the brief could and doing 2 big briefs would be a risk of making one more diluted so therefore I scrapped this brief and plan to make an instagram of my film photography as I am very fond of.