Showing posts with label Alphabet Soup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alphabet Soup. Show all posts

Friday, 19 October 2012

Alphabet Adam

In this brief we had a partner chosen from the randomiser and I got Adam Garbutt. We then had to fill in questionnaires about our selves, then we found that we had to create a typeface and 6 glyphs showing characteristics of our partner. This is when we thought that the questions we had previously answered were not sufficient amount of information about the other person to produce a typeface on them. Therefore we collected our own information afterwards.
The questionnaire;

Our own information;
First we wrote out an alphabet in upper and lower case for each other, so that we could see each others hand writing, I also asked Adam to write out his name, as he joins up his writing.


Quiet person when not drinking
Easy to talk to
Perfectionist
Mostly happy (when not hungry)
Deep sleeper
Printing type
Horder(polythene bags, train tickets, pen nibs)
Likes collecting things
Hairy
Leather shoes
The rest of development(american show)
Back to the future
Quentin Tarentino
Matrix
Custard-Lollipops-Chewing gum(to stop from biting nails)
Near Middelsborough-Skelton
2 brothers, 25, 27
Don't go on nights out a lot
Dog Person
Arial - Arial Rounded - Gill Sans
Lowercase
Sag and Walsh
Fruit
Walking

After finding this information I started to research Adam's likes and dislikes, looking at his blog, even at his facebook, to find out more about him.

Sag and Walsh
http://sagmeister.com/work/featured#/node/191

Sag and Walsh
http://sagmeister.com/work/featured#/node/188

http://www.behance.net/gallery/Ribbon-Alphabet/248759

http://www.zootpatrol.com/index.php/2010/10/10-predictions-back-to-the-future-ii-got-right/

These are some of the designers and films that Adam is interested in so that I can understand things and elements I can include to make my type portray Adam's interest. I also looked in the book 'Hand Job' to find other typefaces that I thought would work well, also 'Hand Job' is one of Adam's favorite books.
Typeface by A.J.Purdy Hand Job
Three typefaces, 2005, pen on paper, Hand Job
These would both work really well to show charactoristics of Adam, as their favourite designer or book or design itself says a lot about them.

Wednesday, 10 October 2012

Pop

With this brief, we first started by using the letter forms which we collected over the summer for the summer brief. We organized all of our letters as a group into ten categories which we had previously chosen as what we know would separate letter forms from one another. Our categories were;

  • Serif
  • Sans-serif
  • Objects in the form of letters
  • Uppercase
  • Lowercase
  • Hand rendered
  • Digital
  • Italic
  • Bold
  • Calligraphy

There were many letters as there were eight people in my group, each with 30 examples of each letter form, therefore we each did our own individual section to make it easier, so its not as cluttered.







We then had to select a word from the randomiser, and I got the word ‘pop’, so started looking into the definition of the word, and all the possibilities I could use to demonstrate the word ‘pop’ in a letter form.
The definition of ‘pop’ is;

abbr.
  •  point of purchase
  •  proof of purchase

v.intr.
  • To make a short, sharp, explosive sound.
  • To burst open with a short, sharp, explosive sound.
  • To move quickly or unexpectedly; appear abruptly: At last the cottage popped into view.
  • To open wide suddenly: The child's eyes popped with astonishment.
  • Baseball To hit a short high fly ball, especially one that can be caught by an infielder: popped out to shortstop.
  • To shoot a firearm, such as a pistol.
  • To release (a clutch) suddenly.

adv.
  • With a popping sound.
  • Abruptly or unexpectedly.

n.
  • A sudden sharp, explosive sound.
  • A shot with a firearm.
  • Chiefly Midwestern U.S. See soft drink. See Regional Note at tonic.
  • Baseball A pop fly.

I also looked at pop art, and the different artist and the aspects of each piece to try and portray pop in my letter forms. First I looked at Roy Lichtenstein’s illustrations and considered that it consists of a lot block colors and repeat patterns, for example on the women's face, repeating dots.



http://fortyfoursunsets44.blogspot.co.uk/2012/04/roy-lichtenstein-retrospecitve.html

I then looked at Andy Warhol and also found that there was a lot of repeating patterns in different color. Also there is a lot of colors which are very vibrant.

 

 http://patriciasainzderozas.blogspot.co.uk/2010/10/pop-art-andy-warhol-roy-lichtenstein.html

http://thehappinesschallenge.tumblr.com/post/32655614603/andy-warhol

Next I looked at different things like with the pop in it, and the sound of popping like;
  • Popcorn
  • Ice-pops
  • Fizzy pop
  • Bubble wrap
  • Party poppers
  • Balloons popping
http://alwayscurious.crownbc.com/?p=814


http://www.crestock.com/image/1970371-Bubbles.aspx

http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/artblog/2007/oct/04/poptastic

http://scriptsforschools.com/catalog/ch-choral-reading-scripts-older-readers/ch-37-pop-until-we-drop-a-popcorn-story/

http://infocommclub.vs.moe.edu.sg/competition11/newdc/index.php
 http://www.incrediblethings.com/home/ice-pops-just-got-more-fun/

I also looked in Typography books such as 'Hand Job' and 'New Illustration with Type' to find type faces which show different things such as pop.

Sound and Vision, 2009. New Illustration and Type
Big Mouth Project, 2009, New Illustration and Type

Typography even without the word pop can show pop, therefore something like this would work for my letter forms, as the first thing that came to mind when you see these examples of type you think of pop.