Showing posts with label illustration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illustration. Show all posts

Wednesday, 3 March 2010

Image-Making

My practice in design revolves mainly around typography and layout, which works fantastically when I have beautiful photos to work with. However I (obviously) can't rely on photographs to run alongside my work nor are they always appropriate and so I have become increasingly interested in how other designers use graphical devices as part of their design process.

Hans Gremmen


Hans Gremmen is a graphic designer, based in Amsterdam. The book below was commissioned by W139.


The cover features a yellow and blue diagonal pattern that reminds me somewhat of an optical illusion. It completely fills the page with an overlaid box in the top-left containing just the necessary information. The pattern creates a harsh line in the center due to the opposing diagonals and looks like fold in the book. The striking pattern and choice of colours make this book feel like it would cut through the comparatively bland designs of most other books it may get sat next to.



Gremmen also carries the yellow and blue theme on throughout the book, choosing to duotone the images with yellow or blue. The cover then sets a style that is continued in the rest of the book, which creates a strong visual style which highly effective and just something different than full-colour of black and white imagery.

Pentagram


Pentagram were chosen to do the identity for the 2009 D&AD student awards and came up with a theme designed to represent the crossover of print and digital worlds.




Pentagram came up with a pixelated version of D&AD's famous pencil logo/award and applied this throughout the campaign as seen above in promotional posters. Close-up it just appears to be a square pattern on the poster but when looked at from a distance, the pencil can be made out. This technique of image-making is also closely boarding on illustration which allowed it to be used so effectively in a variety of different contexts.




Above are a few ways Pentagram chose to use the theme in a more image-making/design element way. Shown on top is a single briefing card with the pixel pattern applied, and below it all of the briefing cards working together with the pixel pattern spread across them to form a bigger image. It also works as the header for the website, tying everything together.

Tuesday, 15 December 2009

I am an element of...

These are a series of posters designed by Angel Alfaro. Designed around the idea of stripping down different practices into tools one would use in each respective category.









Another set of posters that feature really nice colour and vector work. Keeping it simple pays off. The very tight set text is consistent throughout and helps tie them all together again.

The full set can be viewed on Angel's profile at Behance and more of his work can be seen on his website, Atomic Element.

Simple & Funny TV Show Posters

Here are some posters done as a personal project by Exergian. Very simple, but funny.








I like the simple vector illustrations with no harsh black outline and the pale/muted colours. The type is kept very simple, it is the same throughout which adds some continuity to the posters to tie them all together.

To see the full set head over to Exergian's website and scroll right to the bottom or you view them for sale on Blanka if they drop off.