Friday, December 21, 2007

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

T-shirt Design

Giraffe Eating a Psychedelic Pear



Design 2 ; Eaten Pear



Friday, December 14, 2007

Kalidescope


It's a little crooked, but you get the idea....



Illustrator Exersises

Tutorial Practice in Illustrator

Hooray! The clean lines and decorative patterns of Adobe Illustrator make me happy.



Thursday, December 13, 2007

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

CD Cover

The Whale Sharks debut album; Rainbow Migration





Monday, December 10, 2007

The Nine

{Nine of me; a tribute to Warhol}




Tuesday, December 4, 2007

Environmental Alphabet

Alphabet Soup

One challenge designers face is finding compositions through their environment. I searched for something I thought would be pretty easy to spot, but it took a whole week to find the ABC's in objects. So here they are, all twenty six letters of the English alphabet captured in film.


And my name too...


Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Story In Photos

Check Mate
{ a story in photos }









Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Collage:I Rush Hour



It's a jungle out there, in the city...


Friday, November 9, 2007

Elements of Design Illustrated Through Photography

Elements of Design
Defined by Photos

{space}
This image of an amusement park rides illustrates the element of space.
It has both positive and negative space and the objects in the composition overlap and grow smaller as they get farther and farther away.

-line-
This photograph of a roundabout represents the element of line. The street markings vary in width, length, curve and direction. Together the lines create pathways and movement throughout the composition.

{shape/form}
The guitars in this photograph are made up of the element of shape. Their forms are organic, but inside them are 2-d shapes which are geometric, like circles and rectangles.

-value-
This black and white image of a sailboat docked shows a wide variety of value. It has bright whites and dark darks. the shading; the dark shadows on the side of and in the boat, against the tints of light, give the image depth.

{color}
This picture of a rainbow library illustrates the element of color. The colors in the photo are representative of the color wheel, which includes primary colors;red yellow, blue, secondary colors; green, orange, magenta, and tertiary colors; all the in between colors. The colors used in this photograph have a duller intensity and are known as pastel.

-texture-
Texture is the element of art that adds realism and visual feeling to a composition. The umbrella in this photograph is wet with drops of rain. The appearance is faded through the clear umbrella, and the water looks as though is can be touched. The texture displayed is wet, soft, slippery and smooth.

All photos are credited to various artists on flickr.com.

Thursday, November 8, 2007

The Principals of Design Displayed Through Photography


Principals of Design
Defined by Photos

{unity}
This photo of a family of mushrooms, perfectly depicts unity, because the wholeness of the composition. The Visual relationships in this photo work together throughout the piece, take for example the twigs the mushrooms are surrounded by. These twigs create a space for the mushrooms to relate to each other in, without the twigs the composition would fall apart. if one was to remove any of the elements in this photo, the layout as whole would fall apart.


-repetition-
The trees in the image above are repeated to create a sense of rhythm. the patterning of the green on cream colored dirt creates a visual trail. color, shape texture, are echoed in this image illustrating the important principal of repetition.


{contrast}

In this moody photograph a man is picture sitting alone on the beach in the water. He is dark and shadowy just like the water around him, but he holds a bright red umbrella . This is contrast, specifically color contrast. In design contrast is used to emphasize, in this image the umbrella is emphasized, because it is bright and colorful unlike anything else in the composition.


-Balance-
(The equal distribution of visual weight)

{symmetrical balance}
If one were to split this image vertically down the middle the two separate halves would be identical. Because the visual weight is equal, on each side of the composition, this picture of a pen resting inside an open book is perfectly symmetrical.

-aysemetrical balance-
Asymmetrical balance is the opposite of symmetrical balance; the composition is balanced but it's sides are not mirrored. This image of a dalmatian peering out of a fire engine illustrates aysemetrical balance, because the composition is balanced by it's striking red and yellow near the equally weighty black and white. If one was to split th image vertically, or horizontally the sides would look different, but visually their masses would match.

{dominance}
In the middle of the city under a highway bridge, there is a zebra. The wall it resides on is plain and made simply of cement. The zebra is the focal point of the city wall and this picture. It stands out from the rest of the composition, to make a statement. Dominance is represented here by the zebra's greatest notability.

-rhythm-
The subway stairs in the picture above show rhythm because they suggest movement by the repetition and direction of the lines on the walls. Actually, all the elements in this photo follow the down ward, then up motion of the stairs, which sets a jazzy tempo throughout the composition.

{theme}
The princlipal pictured in the above is theme and variation. What makes a theme is when a feature is repeated to give a piece as certain quality. Here the color yellow is played throughout the composition. The color repetition gives the work a lively feel, and a unified theme.

All photos are credited to various artists on flickr.com.