Sep 11 2009
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Sep 08 2009
I have decided to redo color experiments with my venus boy trap story. I am moving the pallet to a more tertiary (behind the story and the drawing) role. The reason for this move stems from the power that the established line style of the drawing invokes. Any over color fights with this style and the resulting mix is forced and contrived. After some research I have decided that a color style somewhat between Maurice Sendak and Mercer Mayer should work. I will post new versions of this test soon. Really … I will get to it.
On the backside, I have geared down my advertising studio work in anticipation of the start of a new semester of school. I am working on a few menu boards for Green Gorilla, a new logo for another company, and some rack cards for a client. I hope to gear up again in a couple of weeks, once the semester starts to settle into place.
I’ve been asked to do a series of political cartoons featuring Obama and healthcare. The mercenary part of me really wants to do it. But there is an underlying reluctance to get involved in such a tired and polarizing topic. One of the cartoons depicts a Iraq veteran waiting 8 months for a properly fitting prosthetic. He has filled out a mountain of paperwork only to receive a reply from the VA that a picture of the effected “missing limb” (an obvious typo) must accompany the forms along with an affidavit from his unit commander that the injury actually occurred in combat. (Based on a true story) The veteran is using toilet paper and homemade velcro straps to hold the prosthetic in place. The cartoon should highlight “the impersonal bureaucracy of government controlled healthcare like the VA.”
Like I said; I may be too close to this issue to create an adequate cartoon.
Aug 27 2009
I have officially started school which was a big deal, and I am working on a number of new studio project as as well. One of these projects was a late night story that I made up for my five year old concerning a giant venus “boy” trap that uses chocolate chip cookies as bait for for its evil and nefarious plan to conquer the world. He art directed the picture this morning as I put it together. The plant tongue had to be blue, his teeth had to be sharp, and there had to be little bones around the base. I added the scared bunny behind the tree.
Aug 10 2009
Green Gorilla is a carwash located in Logan, Utah. The previous designer used cartoon clip art for a gorilla which the client hated. They asked me to create something that was more corporate, (at least not so cartoony) fun, but professional. “It should have the feeling of strength with a green environmentally friendly feel.” (Which gives you an idea how where the other logo did not end up.)
I started, as I always do, with thumbnails in Sketchbook pro. After finding something I liked, I looked up scrap from google and used it as a base for a quick high-contrast conversion. There is no button for this, I do it by sight. There are some who say you can do the same thing by using Threshold in Photoshop, but I like to add things that are not always there or conversely delete things which are there, but get in the way. The best conversions are those done with the mind as a filter not an algorithm. IMHO.
After I have the conversion done, I then jump into Photoshop and start distorting things. Again I could do this by hand, but I like the liquify filter for quickly pushing and pulling lines I have already drawn. It is also convenient to have an undo. After the filter is done creating a mess, I go back over it and redraw the art using the distortion as a base. I will again add or delete elements based on what I feel worked and what didn’t.
When the graphic is pretty much done I copy it over to Adobe Illustrator and do a hand-tracing. Again, there are some who think that Autotrace is the answer to all vector problems. While there is a time and a place for this tool, I often find I can do a cleaner trace, with less points, and a more natural flow, doing it by hand. (Quicker too; when you consider all the time that is saved by not having to clean up the Autotrace mess.)
From here I will start playing with “real” fonts, colors, and design elements. I can spend a lot of time down this hole; Time that is generally well spent. I try and control myself while at the same time giving myself permission to explore as many variables as possible. It is a balance sometimes between making money on a job and finding the best solution. In the process I try to find relationships between the graphic, the shape, the fonts etc. When I have something that begins to work I will clone it and pull it of to the side. This gives me a working file with a series of historical changes. This can be essential if I want to revisit a particular grouping or undo a customized font outline.
Along the way in all of this is the client’s input and direction. I think that their input is essential for a natural collaborative end product that we both share. With the final logo design nailed down, I will then start working on solutions for CMYK, 2 color, 1 color, Greyscale, and Black. I will also find a solution for reverse (if appropriate) or dark backgrounds. In the end I provide solutions in native .ai files as well as jpg, tif, .eps and png.
Jul 22 2009
I’ve created a new website for Mike Kennedy’s campaign for CdA city council. I do a fair amount of work with Mike at Intermax Networks and I have known him for many years. The graphics which include yard signs, hand bills, this web site, a 60 sec video spot (commercial) and other collateral. We are also talking about a billboard and voter registration cards. Anyway, it is good work for a great guy who lets me have the creative freedom to incorporate my ideas into his overall campaign strategy.
Jul 20 2009
This is a test of embedding a YouTube video. Great stuff here for fun and profit.
Jul 09 2009
Web design is a curious thing. As certified control freaks, most designers have an desire to be able to control every element of a project. But to be honest, unless a designer can write the code for themselves, we are at the mercy of the person(s) who did. This means working within a box of sorts. This box contains a thousand pieces of a puzzle, some pieces which can be moved about at will and some pieces that must be placed in the right spot, at the right time.
This week I have been working on two such projects. The first project was a move from one host to another. This entailed backing-up the existing database, custom site-styles and themes; moving the domain to another account, setting up that account, creating a new database, installing the blog engine, and then restoring the style and repopulating the database.
In the end it all came together perfectly. Which is saying a lot, when you realize how much can go wrong.
The second project was an evolution of an ecommerce site. This site has 50+ products of different styles, sizes and attribute based prices. It also has a FedEx shipping module that needed to be customized. Again. With so much that could go wrong it was amazing to me how much went right.
I love giving my clients a great price on functional design that does not break the bank.
Jul 06 2009
Between my bouncing around in advertising, web design, and illustration, my summer activities have included a new commitment to finish my children’s book. It is nothing of great importance, but if opposition is a measure of anything worth doing, then it must be of some value. Along with this undertaking, I am putting finishing touches on a English/Spanish flip book that may have some merit. When these are done I will offer them as e-books as well as your typical case-bound hard copy versions.
There is a great amount of discussion lately on the validity of this new wave of “freeconomics” that seems to power the web. Within this idea, the creation of products (like books) are no longer the end focus. Rather; creating a channel where people can connect and take part in the evolving stream of conciseness, seems to be the order of the day. Within this collective hand wringing, products can be purchased, of course, but the driving distribution paradigm is in the building of this hive mind.
It is a dichotomy of sorts. Much like building a boat in the middle of a desert or building the same boat in the middle of an ocean; too early or too late can kill you.
Some have espoused social networking as a safe middle ground for the exercise. It is a natural base to gather a collective of “followers” if only passive in nature, and use it as a jumping off point for when you are ready to leverage the power of your channel (or network).
Along with this network, is the idea of “giving away” your product. For example, giving away an e-book that can be read on a iPhone, tablet, or computer. People watching such things say that free e-books drive sales to hard copy books of a more traditional nature and profit margin. I have reservations as how long this will last as technology becomes more and more portable over time. It feels like a transition solution. Still, the idea has merits.
It is all very interesting from many points of view. The new breed of publishers, marketers, advertising aficionados, and content producers are looking at this and saying: Hmmmmmm. Myself included.
Jun 24 2009
Get ready for a whiny RANT!
GURU is an online resource for artists and work providers to make connections and bid on jobs. In the past I have used them with some success. They were never enough to provide a steady income, but they did provide a stream of new contacts and clients for a minimal fee. I viewed it as an advertising expense. For $300 a year I picked up some extra work and exposure. In the beginning the work that I did more than made up for the expense. However, as more and more (talented) artists from around the world caught the vision of what GURU was doing the more bids I lost to overseas competition. It is hard to compete when a man in Malaysia will do 40 hours of work for $25. I don’t blame him for feeding his family, but I do not look fondly upon the business that propagates the exploitation. As a matter of fact, I often will look at the employer history and see how many jobs they have contracted overseas. If they all read “India” for example, I avoid them like the plague. For this reason I have developed a talent for reading in-between the lines of ads placed on GURU. The following is an actual ad placed on GURU. My reading between the lines are in red.
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Title: Graphic Designers for T-shirt company Project ID: XXXXXX Category: Illustration / Cartooning / Painting / Sculpting
Description: Start up clothing company, is in search of a few graphic designer/illustrator to work through telecommuting. (Can you read English? )
Experience Requirements: Strong experience with Photoshop, and Illustrator. (We don’t want to know where you got them as long as your pirate version works and you know how to use it.) Online portfolio includes examples logos, branding, t-shirt designs, screenprinting preparations (We have no idea what we are talking about, but the artist should be fully trained and exploitable.)
Company Background: We are a T-shirt company with offices located in San Francisco, CA that is focused on identifying and collaborating with emerging/undiscovered artists globally. (We are looking for artists who will work for peanuts, literally, from 3rd world sweat shops.) Our main goal is to (… undercut regional artists by using digital, tariff-free imports of intellectual property and …) provide premium/rare/unique t-shirts that combine our ideas with those of artists that we collaborate (Take your $100 ideas and pay you a quarter.) with. In addition to producing our own t-shirts (from your work) as well as searching for talented artists (slaves), our site offers an on-going t-shirt competition that is open to all artists. (We encourage a large volume of spec work for which you will never see a dime.)
Project Details: Below is a brief description of current design needs. T-shirt Design ( 3 Series of T-shirt Designs): We have several t-shirt ideas that we’d like to bring to life. We have the picture, (Don’t ask about copyrights) color combination that we’d like to use, screen printing materials & techniques, t-shirt design location, etc all in place. (The only thing we are missing is a tangible creative product.) We’re looking for a designer that can help us through the process of having the design ready for production/screen printing. (Again … we have no clue how to do it on our own and need you to do it for us for next to FREE.)
Packaging, Hang Tags, Labels Design: Going forward, we will be looking to have designs for our packaging, hang tags, marketing materials etc. (We are willing to exploit you further for as long as your Government is stable enough to guarantee internet access.) Please let send a resume, art portfolio, relevant material, and initial thoughts and/or questions regarding the projects detailed above. (If you can read English great. If you can speak and write English; even better.)
Jun 11 2009