Friday 22 March 2013

A Brief History of...Initial Crit


The Crit;
During the progress crit I proposed that I will be looking into creative packaging, further looking into how it has been developed through time, so how it have evolved. I got to this subject from looking at Farrow’s creative CD packaging. I started looking further into creative packing and the tone of voice, which is used when applying it to its audience and context.

My Feedback; 



Looking at the feedback I got from my peers I found that I will need to start looking into something more specific rather than just general creative packaging. Therefore I decided that I would change my publication to be one about a specific brand, and see how the packaging has developed in time, also showing why they have been developed, and why they look that way, considering cultural and social influences.
I also wanted to make a kit, so that my audience would be able to create the packaging themselves, and I found that I needed to experiment more with this, also look into a specific brand first.
My group suggested that I should to consider audience, layout and the shape of my publication. I will take everything that was said in the crit and work on sorting these things out.

10 Things You Need To Know About Graphic Design

Initial research;
When looking into 10 things you need to know about graphic design I started by going on google and seeing what came up when I typed it in. This allowed me to find different websites about what people think you should know as a graphic designer.

http://www.howdesign.com/design-career/29-things-young-designers-need-to-know/
http://designreviver.com/articles/10-essential-skills-every-graphic-designer-should-have/
These are some of the websites which I found, and they weren't very useful and I didn't agree with them. Therefore I decided to go through my blog and find the things which I have learnt throughout being on this course and throughout design principles.

1. Typography

Fonts fall into a range of catagories; Block, Gothic, Roman, Script.

Futura
Gothic - Standard simple sans serif.
Bookman Old Style
Roman - Standard serif.
Hobo Std
Block - Display and header fonts.
Lucinda Handwriting
Script - Hand drawn like sable.


2. Colour Theory
The colour mode CMYK prints with physical inks, cyan, magenta, yellow and black, whereas the colour mode RGB is the projection of light, red, green and blue.


CMYK is subtractive colour, therefore when you subtract cyan, megenta and yellow, it gives you the key(black). RGB is additive colour, and adding red, green and blue together gives you white.

CMYK is used for printing design and RGB is used for web and screen based design, although you can work with RGB colour mode when you are designing something for screen and print, just remember to change the colour mode to CMYK before printing.

3. Legible/Readable
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Legibility - Is the degree to which glyphs (individual characters) in text are understandable or recognizable based on appearance. It is the clarity of the individual letters.

Readability - Is the ease in which text can be read and understood. It is influenced by line length, primary and secondary leading, justification, typestyle, kerning, tracking, point size, etc.

4. Optical mixing and Physical mixing
- optical mixing: Layering colours (CMYK) to create a desired colour.
- Physical mixing: flat colour. 
In order to create a lighter or darker version of the colour, the dots would be moved further apart, infusing more white space and creating a lighter shade. and then minimising the white space in-between the dots to create a darker shade. 
when colours are dense we cannot see the dots, in less dense colours the dots are further apart. 
In YCMB/K optical printing  each of the 4 plates are rotated out of sync so they are offset and you can see the existence of each plate. 
  • There are two different processes of colour, optical and physical;
  • Optical - is made up of dots of colours to make that colour you perceive.
  • Physical - it is a flat colour and is mixed so there is no dots.
  • When looking at pantone books, formula is physical and CMYK is optical.
  • One colour plate is cheaper.
  • Greyscale mode has only one plate.
  • CMYK mode has three plates.
  • You can usually go up to 7 plates
  • Work in constant lighting, this is so that the way you perceive the colour doesn't change.
  • The tints pantone book - the colour gets more saturated as the dots get closer together. It is not physically getting more saturated, it is just changing the tint. Optically giving you different tints, this is done by adjusting the dot pitch. (which is not the same as DPI, Dots Per Inch)
5. Semiotics
Sign
Signal
Signifier


All that is necessary for any language to exist amongst a group of people is the concept that one thing will stand for another.
Semiotics
Symbol- What the image represents.
Sign - The brand/ company in which it is representing.
Signifies - What it suggests and implies.

Semiotics is one that is frequently encountered and must be understood in the world of graphic design, visual communication design in particular. The word semiotics derived from Greek words: 'semeion' meaning 'sign' which is a lesson about the system of signs such as languages​​, codes, signals, and so forth.
Semiotics, meaning the use of communication through signs and symbols, is used for many different things. A good example of this would be traffic signs. There are often symbols for pedestrians crossings made with silhouettes or simple stick figures. The purpose is usually to warn people of what to expect, and provide helpful information. By this I mean that signs will usually have written directions, or symbols of arrows to show a certain way. These images show examples of the written communication.
Semiotics has a meaning which the object not only contains the information, but also carry an emotional impact for the audience. Human senses will catch the signal and then pull the impression to the brain which leads to a conclusion subjective meanings depending on the perspective of each audience.
http://jayce-o.blogspot.com/2011/05/semiotics-in-graphic-design.html

6. Difference between Typeface and Font
Most people think that a font and a typeface are the same thing, and they are easily mistakable, but they are different.
Typeface - A collection of characters, letters, numbers, symbols, punctuation etc. which have the same distinct design. Different weights of the same font are all the same typeface. Could be up to 15 fonts in 1 typeface. Regular is the initial design for a font, its just the starting point for a typeface.

Font - The physical means used to create a typeface, be it computer code, lithographic film, metal or woodcut. One width, one weight, one style of a typeface with a constant stroke and weight.
For example, Gill Sans is a typeface and it has 7 fonts within it;
Light. Regular, Itlaic, Light Italic, Ultra Bold Condensed, Bold and Bold Italic. 


7. Never Kern a font
When dealing with tracking and kerning, you can never kern a font but you can track a font. 

Tracking - Is about adding lead to create a bigger space between the letters in a word or sentence. It is extending.

Kerning - Is bringing the letterforms closer together. It is condensing.

8. Colour Wheel
  • Primary colours, red yellow and blue, because you can't make those colour by mixing other colours. 
  • Secondary colours, violet green and orange, because they are made up from mixing the primary colours. Mixing only two of the Primary colours.
  • Tertiarys are the colours made up of the primary and secondary colours, the intermediate colour.
9. GridsDPS;
DPS means double page spread in this context. It has two pages treated as one in a publication, with images or text extending across the binding.
Grids;
Something resembling a framework of crisscrossed parallel bars, as in rigidity or organization: The city's streets form a grid.
Columns;
Printing One of two or more vertical sections of typed lines lying side by side on a page and separated by a rule or a blank space. A feature artile that appears regularly in a publication, such as a newspaper.
Gutters;
The blank space between facing pages of a book or between adjacent columns of type or stamps in a sheet.
Margins;
Any deliberately unprinted space on a page, especially surrounding a block of text. Margins are used not only to aid in the aesthetics and the readability of a page, but also to provide allowances for trimming, binding, and other post-press operations.
Sub-heads;
In typography, a secondary heading, often in a smaller point size and set below the primary head.
Paragraph;
A distinct section of a piece of writing, usually dealing with a single theme and indicated by a new line, indentation, or numbering.
Captions;
A title or brief explanation appended to an article, illustration, or poster.
Ligatures;
In typography, two or more characters designed as a distinct unit and commonly available as a single character. Examples are ae, ce, etc.
Pagination;
Refers to numbering pages in a document. Refers to dividing a document into pages. Most word processors automatically paginate documents based on a page size that you specify. Some word processors enable you to avoid widows and orphans during pagination.
Golden Section;
GoldenNumber.Net explores the appearance of Phi, 1.618 (also known as the Golden Ratio, Golden Mean, Golden Section or Divine Proportion, in mathematicsgeometrylife and the universe and shows you how to apply it, and its applications are limitless.
Folio number;
In typography, a page number, commonly placed outside the running head at the top of the page. Folios are also commonly set flush left on verso pages and flush right on recto pages. They can also be centered at the top of the page. A folio that appears at the bottom of a page is called a drop folio.
Drop caps;
In a written work, an initial is a letter at the beginning of a work, a chapter or a paragraph that is larger than the rest.
Picas;
A basic unit of measurement in typography. One pica equals 12 points, and 6 picas equal approximately 1 inch.
Points;
Unit of measurement commonly used to specify type size. There are twelve points in a pica and 72 points in an inch.
Pixels;
Shorthand term for picture element, or the smallest point or dot on a computer monitor.
Greeking;
In computing, a means of speeding up the display redraw rate of a computer monitor by representing text characters below a certain size as gray lines, boxes, or illegible dummy type.

10. Points in a Pica 
Point


A point size measures the height of a font, it is a subdivision of a pica which is larger than a point. There are 12 points in one pica. 


Pica


Pica’s are used for measuring lines of type. There are three types of picas, French Pica, Traditional British and American Pica and the Post Script Pica.


Pixel


A pixel is a sample of an original image. Each pixel is made of three dots, red, blue and green. They are the smallest controllable device in an image.
The short answer is, a pixel — the basic dot in a TV screen — is the same thing as a point, the printer’s smallest measure. That one fact dictates all the relationships in online design, from why it is online images are always set to 72 dpi (dots per inch) to how to convert back and forth between inches and pixels.
A pixel is a dot is a point. Remember that and everything else falls into place: Points, pixels and dots are all the same thing.
https://www.dougv.com/2007/11/05/the-relationships-between-pixels-points-picas-dots-and-inches/

12 points = 1 pica
1 point = .013837 inches
72 points (6 picas) = .996264 inches (not 1 inch)
It explains that the actual difference between 72 points or 6 picas to 1 inch is actually 1/268 . Crazy huh?
Now, let's throw the pixel and computer graphics into the midst:
16 pixels  = 1 picas
1 pixel = .75 points
So a 12 point font equivalent is 16 pixels
1 pixel = .010416667 inches, therefore 96 pixels = 1 inch

11. Negative Space
Negative space may be most evident when the space around a subject, and not the subject itself, forms an interesting or artistically relevant shape, and such space is occasionally used to artistic effect as the "real" subject of an image. The use of negative space is a key element of artistic composition.
The use of equal negative space, as a balance to positive space, in a composition is considered by many as good design. This basic and often overlooked principle of design gives the eye a "place to rest," increasing the appeal of a composition through subtle means. The term is also used by musicians to indicate silence within a piece.
Usage of negative space will produce a silhouette of the subject. Most often, though, negative space is used as a neutral or contrasting background to draw attention to the main subject which is then referred to as the positive space. 

12. The anatomy of type.
http://www.plainlanguagenetwork.org/type/utbo130.htm

www.fontshop.com
http://graphicdesign.spokanefalls.edu/tutorials/process/type_basics/
 
Ascender
The lowercase character stroke which extends above the x-height.

Bar
The horizontal stroke on the characters ‘A’, ‘H’, ‘T’, ‘e’, ‘f’, ‘t’.

Baseline
The imaginary horizontal line to which the body, or main component, of characters are aligned.

Bowl
The curved stroke which surrounds a counter.

Bracket
A curved line connecting the serif to the stroke.

Contrast
The amount of variation in between thick and thin strokes.

Counter
The empty space inside the body stroke.

Descender.
The lowercase character stroke which extends below the baseline.

Loop
The bottom part of the lowercase roman ‘g’.

Sans serif
From the French, meaning “without serif”. A typeface which has no serifs.
Sans serif typefaces are typically uniform in stroke width.
Serif
Tapered corners on the ends of the main stroke. Serifs originated with the chiseled guides made by ancient stonecutters as they lettered monuments. Some serif designs may also be traced back to characteristics of hand calligraphy. Note that serif type is typically thick and thin in stroke weight.

Shoulder
The part of a curved stroke coming from the stem.

Stem
A stroke which is vertical or diagonal.

Stress
The direction in which a curved stroke changes weight.

Terminal
The end of a stroke which does not terminate in a serif.

X-height
The height of the body, minus ascenders and descenders, which is equal to the height of the lowercase ‘x’.

Tuesday 19 March 2013

Week 5 - Summary

What we researched and found out;

What is DPS and what does it do?
DPS means double page spread in this context. It has two pages treated as one in a publication, with images or text extending across the binding.
What are grids, columns, gutters and margins?
Organise and balance the pages with grids, gutters and margins are used to accommodate for the text and images. Columns are the structure to the publication, it allows you to see where the text is.
What are sub-heads, paragraphs, captions and ligatures?
Subheading is a group of words that can give a reader an idea about the topic in more detail than the heading, and usually sits under the heading. Paragraphs consists of one or more sentences. Captions appear below the image, and usually describes an image or explain what is happening. Ligature is two or more letters combined to make a connection between the two.
What is a golden section?
It is used to find the best area on a page to display different things, and proportion your page out properly.Golden number is 1.61/1.62.
Explain what rulers, boxes, folio number, and drop caps are.
Drop caps are in old books and bibles, it is used to signify a break in the text. Folio is the numbers in the bottom of the page, in a book its the page, with newspapers it is usually the page number and the date. Boxes and rulers are are used in layout, they help you to get balance and make things straight and equal.
What are 'picas', points, pixels?
Pica is a measuring unit of typography, there are different ways of writing picas, pixels are a sample of an original image, each pixel is made up of three dots RGB, its the smallest controllable device in an image. Point is the unit of measuring a font

Definitions;
DPS;
DPS means double page spread in this context. It has two pages treated as one in a publication, with images or text extending across the binding.
Grids;
Something resembling a framework of crisscrossed parallel bars, as in rigidity or organization: The city's streets form a grid.
Columns;
Printing One of two or more vertical sections of typed lines lying side by side on a page and separated by a rule or a blank space. A feature article that appears regularly in a publication, such as a newspaper.
Gutters;
The blank space between facing pages of a book or between adjacent columns of type or stamps in a sheet.
Margins;
Any deliberately unprinted space on a page, especially surrounding a block of text. Margins are used not only to aid in the aesthetics and the readability of a page, but also to provide allowances for trimming, binding, and other post-press operations.
Sub-heads;
In typography, a secondary heading, often in a smaller point size and set below the primary head.
Paragraph;
A distinct section of a piece of writing, usually dealing with a single theme and indicated by a new line, indentation, or numbering.
Captions;
A title or brief explanation appended to an article, illustration, or poster.
Ligatures;
In typography, two or more characters designed as a distinct unit and commonly available as a single character. Examples are ae, ce, etc.
Pagination;
Refers to numbering pages in a document. Refers to dividing a document into pages. Most word processors automatically paginate documents based on a page size that you specify. Some word processors enable you to avoid widows and orphans during pagination.
Golden Section;
GoldenNumber.Net explores the appearance of Phi, 1.618 (also known as the Golden Ratio, Golden Mean, Golden Section or Divine Proportion, in mathematicsgeometrylife and the universe and shows you how to apply it, and its applications are limitless.
Folio number;
In typography, a page number, commonly placed outside the running head at the top of the page. Folios are also commonly set flush left on verso pages and flush right on recto pages. They can also be centered at the top of the page. A folio that appears at the bottom of a page is called a drop folio.
Drop caps;
In a written work, an initial is a letter at the beginning of a work, a chapter or a paragraph that is larger than the rest.
Picas;
A basic unit of measurement in typography. One pica equals 12 points, and 6 picas equal approximately 1 inch.
Points;
Unit of measurement commonly used to specify type size. There are twelve points in a pica and 72 points in an inch.
Pixels;
Shorthand term for picture element, or the smallest point or dot on a computer monitor.
Greeking;
In computing, a means of speeding up the display redraw rate of a computer monitor by representing text characters below a certain size as gray lines, boxes, or illegible dummy type.

Peer reviewing;
We all had to leave some layout work up that we have done during these sessions, we then had to crit other peoples work, these are the comments which I received;

'Strong balance between text and image, more inventive than having the text in column along!'

'Prefer the second page as the illustrations under the title/header compliments the bottom images.'


The feedback which I received for this task wasn't very constructive as I only got two different comments, it would have been better if we all had to comment on everyones, then everyone would have a large range of comments and lots of feedback. What I will take from this is that it is better to relate all the images together in an inventive way, and ensure that my text to image ratio works well in what ever context I am using.

Friday 15 March 2013

Group 7 10,000 Steps

Initial research;
When I started looking into this brief, I first thought about what 10,000 steps were, and what impact they had on the world. I found many different websites about how people are trying to promote walking 10,000 steps everyday, and how it leads to a healthier lifestyle.

http://www.gettheworldmoving.com/how-it-works
This is more of a corporate advert, trying to get people to walk more everyday. This information was to get ideas for my group, I am researching this so that I can find out as much information as I can about 10,000 steps.
http://www.nhs.uk/Livewell/loseweight/Pages/10000stepschallenge.aspx
This was more of a health website, showing how to get more healthy by just walking rather than doing major exercise and changing the way you live.

http://www.thewalkingsite.com/10000steps.html
This website was very useful as it gave me lots of facts about why walking is good for you, what walking 10,000 steps does for your health. It has informed me on why people should walk 10,000 steps or try to, this means that I will be informed in this brief.
Here are some ideas for how to get more active and walk more;


  • Take a walk with your spouse, child, or friend
  • Walk the dog
  • Use the stairs instead of the elevator
  • Park farther from the store
  • Better yet, walk to the store
  • Get up to change the channel
  • Window shop
  • Plan a walking meeting
  • Walk over to visit a neighbor
  • Get outside to walk around the garden or do a little weeding
  • Thesaurus;
    When looking for names for our brand I thought that I would go onto a thesaurus to find some words which would link to walking and exercise, I used this website. http://thesaurus.com/browse/speed?s=t
    Speed;
    Definition:

    rate of motion, often a high rate
    Synonyms: acceleration, activity, agility, alacrity, breeze, briskness, celerity, clip, dispatch, eagerness, expedition, fleetness, gait, haste, headway, hurry, hustle, legerity, lick, liveliness, momentum, pace, precipitancy, precipitation, promptitude, promptness, quickness, rapidity, rapidness, readiness, rush, rustle, snap, steam, swiftness, urgency, velocity
    Notes: speed  is the distance an object travels during a unit of time; velocity  is the distance an object travels in a specified direction during a unit of time
    Walk;
    Definition: brief travel on foot
    Synonyms: airing, carriage, circuit, constitutional, gait, hike, jaunt, march, pace, parade, perambulation, peregrination, promenade, ramble, saunter, schlepp, step, stretch, stride, stroll, tour, traipse, tramp, tread, turn
    Definition: move along on foot
    Synonyms: advance, amble, ambulate, canter, escort, exercise, file, foot, go, go on foot, hike, hit the road, hoof it, knock about, lead, leg*, locomote, lumber, march, meander, pace, pad, parade, patrol, perambulate, plod, prance, promenade, race, roam, rove, run, saunter, scuff, shamble, shuffle, slog, stalk, step, stride, stroll, strut, stump, take a walk, toddle, tour, traipse, tramp, travel on foot, traverse, tread, trek, troop, trudge, wander, wend one's way
    Antonyms: run
    Exercise;
    Definition: work, effort
    Synonyms: act, action, activity, calisthenics, constitutional, daily dozen, discharge, discipline, drill, drilling, examination, exercising, exertion, gym, labor, lesson, movement, occupation, operation, performance, problem, pursuit, recitation, schoolwork, study, task, test, theme, toil, training, warm-up, workout
    Definition: do repeatedly, especially to improve
    Synonyms: break, break in, condition, cultivate, develop, discipline, drill, dry run, exert, fix, foster, groom, habituate, hone, improve, inure, labor, lick into shape, limber up, loosen up, maneuver, ply, practice, prepare, pump iron, put out, put through grind, put through mill, rehearse, run through, set, strain, teach, train, tune up, walk through, warm up, work, work out 
    I have looked in a thesaurus to find words which link to being active and doing things, which it what we are trying to get people to do, therefore I thought that this would be a god idea for logos or slogans.

    We changed our original idea to do a kit, as it wasn't very doable, so we decided to make a publication based on motivational quotes trying to get people to walk more and do more excise.

    Motivational quotes and posters;
    http://beautyculturesarcasm.tumblr.com/post/41456361333
    This is a good quote and will influence my design with the layout that the text is, also the simplicity of the design will suit our style of publication. This quote would be easy to do an illustration for, therefore this will help me a lot.

    http://pinterest.com/daisysunshine1/10-000-steps/
    This is an advertisement for hasfit.com and is in the same sort of style as how our publication will be presented. Have the most important word in a different colour to the rest of the text, this will make the word stand out more as it will have a larger contrast.

    http://pinterest.com/daisysunshine1/10-000-steps/
    The contrast of the colours on this design is high, therefor the writing stands out a lot on the page, this would be good for the design of our publication, but using our colours, just make sure they have a high contrast.

    http://pinterest.com/pin/564638872001706195/
    Nike is a large company with a lot of weight behind their name, it shows that what they say can be trusted. Although I don't like the quote itself I do like the way it has been laid out on the page, I think that would be a good format for the publication.
    http://pinterest.com/daisysunshine1/10-000-steps/
    Love this quote, I would be able to do a good illustration for this quote, I could also do some info graphics for this, it is the exact kind of quote that we should be using the publication.

    http://pinterest.com/pin/564638872001706200/
    This is more motivational than shocking people into doing exercise or being humorous.

    http://pinterest.com/pin/564638872001706182/
    http://p-faff.tumblr.com/post/26188493774/haha-bottom-right-those-are-called-skull-crushers
    http://www.google.com/reader/view/
    http://27.media.tumblr.com/tumblr_lt9p1q6aiD1qd6sc5o2_500.gif
    I started to look at different exercise illustrations and info graphics for different things.  For example using the dog quote above I could create an info graphic of a dog getting thinner the more the dog gets walked.

    I am doing the packaging for the kit, therefore I started looking for information about getting blisters, and why water is good for you when exercising, or just drinking water in general.
    http://www.bphc.org/programs/cib/chronicdisease/heal/takethestairs/pages/home.aspx
    http://www.eatcleanlivehealthy.com/top-10-health-benefits-of-drinking-water/
    This website gave me a lot of information that will help me to find a quote to use on the bottles of water that we will be giving out in our pack.
    The  amount of water you consume is extremely important to ones health. Here are the top 10 benefits of drinking water:
    1. Weight Loss
    Drinking water helps you lose weight better then anything else in the world. Water flushes down the by-products of fat breakdown. Drinking water can also reduce hunger and acts as an appetite suppressant so you’ll eat less. Water has also has zero calories.
    2. Have Healthier Skin and Look Younger
    When your skin is properly hydrated you will always look younger. Water helps to replenish skin tissues, moisturizes skin and increase the elasticity in your skin.
    3. Natural Remedy for Headaches and Migraines
    Water helps relieve headaches and back pains. These are sometimes caused by dehydration and replenishing your body with water can help. Although there are many other reasons contribute to headaches and migraines, dehydration is the common one.
    4. Better Productivity
    Your brain consists of 90% water so drinking more can improve your productivity at work and in doing other tasks. It helps you think better, be more alert, and helps make you concentrate a lot better.
    5. Better Exercise
    Drinking water regulates your body temperature throughout the day. You will feel a lot more energy when performing exercises and water also helps to fuel your muscles.
    6. Helps in Digestion and Constipation
    Drinking water boosts your metabolism because it helps your digestive system work properly. Fiber and water goes hand in hand so that you can have your daily bowel movement.
    7. Less Cramps, Sprains, and Injuries
    Proper hydration helps keep your joints and muscles lubricated, so you’ll less likely get cramps and sprains.
    8. Less Likely to Get Sick and Feel Healthy
    Drinking plenty of water helps fight ailments like the flu, kidney stones, and heart attack. Water mixed with lemon is used primarily for ailments like respiratory disease, intestinal problems, rheumatism and arthritis etc. Drinking water also improves our immune system.
    9. Relieves Fatigue
    Water is used by the body to help flush out toxins and waste products that the body doesn’t need. If your body lacks of water your heart will need to work a lot harder to pump out the oxygenated blood to all cells. Same goes for the rest of your vital organs, your organs will be exhausted and so will you.
    10. It Puts You in A Good Mood
    Water makes your body feel good and gives you more energy. Your body will communicate with your brain and tell it that it’s happy.
    source

    This website will be very useful and will influence my design greatly, it will help me to find information and quotes to use on my water bottle. It will help me to cause impact about how drinking water is really good for you, in really simple minimal words. I need this to be simple as it is the way that the whole publication has been designed, therefore I need to be consistent with my group.

    As I am doing the packaging for some things that could go in a walking kit with our brand all over it, I thought about looking at creative packaging for different things.

    http://webdesignledger.com/inspiration/excellent-examples-of-package-design
    Looking at this packaging I find that it is very aesthetically pleasing. The colours work really well together, the stock is of a good quality and it looks very professional, this is something I am going to try and achieve with my packaging.

    http://www.froot.nl/categorie/lifestyle/creatieve-productverpakkingen-2/
    Tissues might also be a good idea for the kit, the packaging that is used for it is very creative with simply the use of colour, a slight bit of colour. This is something that will influence my design, keeping it very simple but it will be creative with the slight use of colour.

    http://ego-alterego.com/2012/02/20-creative-packaging-examples/#.UYPm9RkVwxc
    This deign is really interesting, I could use this idea and adapt it to make it into something that is relevant to our group project, for example someone running, then open it and she has run further.
    I found that although I want to try to produce some packaging to be creative, it wouldn't go with the publication very well, therefore I need to keep the packaging design as simple as possible so that it is consistent with the rest of the work that my group has done.

    http://www.brookfarmgeneralstore.com/handmade-soap-lavender/
    As I need the packaging to be simple and minimal I thought I would start looking up more simple packaging designs. This is similar to the stock colour we are using, therefore will be similar to this, I think that have just type on the packaging is effective, minimal and professional.

    http://liebesbotschaft.blogspot.com.br/2008/11/versiegelt.html
    One colour for the stock and red thread with a wax seal looks really effective, minimal and professional just like our publication, therefore I need to think about keeping it contestant this way. Although I wont be using thread for the publication, it is good to have this idea for future designs.

    http://thegiftsoflife.tumblr.com/post/34298528171
    I like this design as is it very minimal and simple just like the concept for our publication and the publication itself.  This is a CD cover, and as I am making a motivational mix on a CD, I will need to produce the CD cover, this is a good way to do it, have no print on the packaging at all, and the packaging is simple yet creative, therefore works really well on its own.