Pearlfisher for Woolworths SA Organic
This packaging design for an organic food brand is gorgeous. I really love the simplicity, type, and colour; as well as the small illustrative elements.
Task: New brand creation conveying modern South African authenticity, depth and taste.
Scope: Strategy and brand identity design
Blogs...
Current Blogs
FMP Design Practice - My ideas and development for each of the briefs that I am working on for my final project of my 3rd year
Design Context - The designers, work, processes and existing products that I am looking at the gain inspiration and help to inform my design work
Personal Professional Development - Documentation of my professional development over the course of my 3rd year
Bread and Butterflies - This blog remains the homepage/hub of all my blogs, as well as acting as an area that I use for posting stuff that doesn't relate directly to my design work.
Idle Blogs
3rd Year Module 1 Design Practice
Sunday, 30 November 2008
Jamie Oliver
Pearlfisher for Jamie Oliver
Task: New brand creation, developing a new lifestyle concept that elevates the Jamie Oliver experience from the kitchen to the home.
Scope: Strategy, logo, brand identity, corporate identity, structural design, design of over 170 SKUs, secondary packaging, tone of voice, naming, pack and web copy.
I really like the old icon quality that these designs have. The overall designs are quite quirky, and colourful, in a simple but bold way. I want to see these on shelves!
Task: New brand creation, developing a new lifestyle concept that elevates the Jamie Oliver experience from the kitchen to the home.
Scope: Strategy, logo, brand identity, corporate identity, structural design, design of over 170 SKUs, secondary packaging, tone of voice, naming, pack and web copy.
I really like the old icon quality that these designs have. The overall designs are quite quirky, and colourful, in a simple but bold way. I want to see these on shelves!
Packaging...
I am (sadly) becoming more and more ridiculously obsessed with packaging. I have always been one of those people who will just buy things for the box they come in, or the bag you get from a shop. I have been looking at the packaging design of different design companies;
[Graphic thought facility]
I really like the illustrative qualities this package has. The cut out flower garland is really beautiful and intricate, but I think it is just there to make the photograph look good...
[Pearlfisher]
This design company are amazing! I love pretty much all of their work...here are some of my favourites...
This Water
Task: Strategic rebrand and relaunch, moving
[Graphic thought facility]
I really like the illustrative qualities this package has. The cut out flower garland is really beautiful and intricate, but I think it is just there to make the photograph look good...
[Pearlfisher]
This design company are amazing! I love pretty much all of their work...here are some of my favourites...
This Water
Task: Strategic rebrand and relaunch, moving
out of Innocent’s shadow and becoming a confident stand-alone new water brand.
Scope: Strategy, naming, brand identity, writing and tone of voice
Scope: Strategy, naming, brand identity, writing and tone of voice
CMYK Characters...
I found these on a google search ages ago, but have only just recovered the image from an old USB drive. I love how cute these little characters are, but they're actually packaging for printer cartridges. I like that the simple packaging has been inventively designed and aren't too over complicated for the throw away packaging that they are. Cutely named 'Cardboy'
Faber & Faber
Strange Comparison...
I was looking at the design by build website [wearebuild.com] and found this design for a CD case. The first thing I noticed was its strange resemblance to the cover of 'How to be a graphic designer without losing your soul'...i realise that it's not exactly the same, but I think that the layout is pretty similar.
Friday, 28 November 2008
OUGD 201_Design Production_Evaluation
Alexandra Bucktin
BA (Hons.) GRAPHIC DESIGN
Level 02 Design Production OUGD 201
The focus of my work for this module has been primarily learning about printing. The Colour for Print and Design for Print briefs have enabled me to explore print in a much more thorough was than ever before. The Colour for Print brief has been much more about principles, and rules about printing; how everything works in reality. The Design for Print project has enabled me to put some of this learning into practice and start to understand more about colour and printing within my own work.
The skills I have developed since the beginning of this module have been relatively intangible. I have learnt so much about the principles of printing and colour systems, but it all seems to be information, and not physical work. In a way I think that this is a good thing – I now have a large knowledge base of the conventions of printing that I can apply to all of my future work, which will only make it better and more suited to commercial purposes. I am really glad that we started our second year by learning about something that is invaluable in the design world.
I tried to apply all I had learnt from the Colour brief to the Design for Print brief. Granted there was the odd hiccup with trying to print certain colours and tones, but I feel that I was able to make my work better because I was considering the printed outcome, not just the design on screen or paper. I now know that this is really important because it makes me think about the overall design process, and the way in which I am going to produce work. From learning about print, I have also learnt about how digital colour works – I realise that it is the opposite, and in a round about way have learnt about an entirely different area of design.
I really feel that this project has shown completely different strengths to my work, than the briefs that I completed at the end of last year. I chose to use illustration, something I have not yet properly tackled on this course. I was really please to find that tutors and students alike thought that my illustration work was interesting, and slightly different, but subtle. I have capitalised on this strength by making my print brief mainly about the illustration. I purposely used simple typefaces and text in my resolutions so that the illustration was able to stand out.
During the print brief I had to take some time out for family reasons, and this gave a strange break to my work, that I had not experience before. Because I had to take some time away from the studio, using a computer everyday and generally always having my work at the back of my mind; when I returned to full time work I found that my pace of work picked up, I chose an idea and stuck with it, and I was much more confident about the decision I had made with regard to production. I think that this was the case because I continued to work toward my unextended deadline, which made me more organised (something I didn’t really think was possible!) and much more aware of the time I has to produce my final resolutions.
The weaknesses within this brief are more to do with not having as many crits as the other students, due to the aforementioned reason, and generally not having other students to bounce ideas off of so readily. I really like talking to others about my work and their work equally, and helping each other along with new ideas. I think that my work may have suffered a little from not doing this, in that I was forced to make decision on my own, with no real confirmation that I was on the right track.
If I were to have the opportunity to repeat this module there are several things that I would do differently; Firstly I would not take the time off that I had to; this would have provided me with more studio hours, more time to use the print areas, and more opportunity to experiment. I would have possible researched my project in a different way, maybe done it at a more outdoorsy time of year, I think that this has effected by ability to gain primary research and generally be more ‘into’ the project.
I would have liked to use different forms of print. I have experimented with screen print, and really enjoyed the process – however many problems I encountered. I would really like to look into doing more of this, and possibly some different hand based print processes, as the finished product can really surprise you. I think that digital print has become such a readily available output for our design work, that we are ignoring some really interesting ways we can produce more innovative designs.
Having this brief, plus two other theory based briefs, and several workshops all going on at the same time has been quite hard. I realise that we have to learn to juggle a lot of different projects at once, but I think maybe this has affected my work in other areas. Our timetabling has been rather confusing, and I know that this is not always down to human error; however, I have attended some sessions that I was not required to, and have therefore wasted time that could have been used more constructively.
Overall, I have really enjoyed this module. I have learnt so much that I can now apply to future briefs, and I think that I have found an area of design that I really enjoy. With the next opportunity for print based production I really want to try designing packaging, so I am hoping that this will be on the cards at some point this year.
BA (Hons.) GRAPHIC DESIGN
Level 02 Design Production OUGD 201
The focus of my work for this module has been primarily learning about printing. The Colour for Print and Design for Print briefs have enabled me to explore print in a much more thorough was than ever before. The Colour for Print brief has been much more about principles, and rules about printing; how everything works in reality. The Design for Print project has enabled me to put some of this learning into practice and start to understand more about colour and printing within my own work.
The skills I have developed since the beginning of this module have been relatively intangible. I have learnt so much about the principles of printing and colour systems, but it all seems to be information, and not physical work. In a way I think that this is a good thing – I now have a large knowledge base of the conventions of printing that I can apply to all of my future work, which will only make it better and more suited to commercial purposes. I am really glad that we started our second year by learning about something that is invaluable in the design world.
I tried to apply all I had learnt from the Colour brief to the Design for Print brief. Granted there was the odd hiccup with trying to print certain colours and tones, but I feel that I was able to make my work better because I was considering the printed outcome, not just the design on screen or paper. I now know that this is really important because it makes me think about the overall design process, and the way in which I am going to produce work. From learning about print, I have also learnt about how digital colour works – I realise that it is the opposite, and in a round about way have learnt about an entirely different area of design.
I really feel that this project has shown completely different strengths to my work, than the briefs that I completed at the end of last year. I chose to use illustration, something I have not yet properly tackled on this course. I was really please to find that tutors and students alike thought that my illustration work was interesting, and slightly different, but subtle. I have capitalised on this strength by making my print brief mainly about the illustration. I purposely used simple typefaces and text in my resolutions so that the illustration was able to stand out.
During the print brief I had to take some time out for family reasons, and this gave a strange break to my work, that I had not experience before. Because I had to take some time away from the studio, using a computer everyday and generally always having my work at the back of my mind; when I returned to full time work I found that my pace of work picked up, I chose an idea and stuck with it, and I was much more confident about the decision I had made with regard to production. I think that this was the case because I continued to work toward my unextended deadline, which made me more organised (something I didn’t really think was possible!) and much more aware of the time I has to produce my final resolutions.
The weaknesses within this brief are more to do with not having as many crits as the other students, due to the aforementioned reason, and generally not having other students to bounce ideas off of so readily. I really like talking to others about my work and their work equally, and helping each other along with new ideas. I think that my work may have suffered a little from not doing this, in that I was forced to make decision on my own, with no real confirmation that I was on the right track.
If I were to have the opportunity to repeat this module there are several things that I would do differently; Firstly I would not take the time off that I had to; this would have provided me with more studio hours, more time to use the print areas, and more opportunity to experiment. I would have possible researched my project in a different way, maybe done it at a more outdoorsy time of year, I think that this has effected by ability to gain primary research and generally be more ‘into’ the project.
I would have liked to use different forms of print. I have experimented with screen print, and really enjoyed the process – however many problems I encountered. I would really like to look into doing more of this, and possibly some different hand based print processes, as the finished product can really surprise you. I think that digital print has become such a readily available output for our design work, that we are ignoring some really interesting ways we can produce more innovative designs.
Having this brief, plus two other theory based briefs, and several workshops all going on at the same time has been quite hard. I realise that we have to learn to juggle a lot of different projects at once, but I think maybe this has affected my work in other areas. Our timetabling has been rather confusing, and I know that this is not always down to human error; however, I have attended some sessions that I was not required to, and have therefore wasted time that could have been used more constructively.
Overall, I have really enjoyed this module. I have learnt so much that I can now apply to future briefs, and I think that I have found an area of design that I really enjoy. With the next opportunity for print based production I really want to try designing packaging, so I am hoping that this will be on the cards at some point this year.
Thursday, 27 November 2008
Litho Printing...
For my final resolutions, I have stated that I would use litho printing to produce the leaflet. I think that litho printing is probably the most relevant type of printing to all of the work I produce (not just in this brief). I have found a brief explanation about how lithography printing works, and having been taught about it, and seen how the machines work, it all seems rather simple now!
From Wikipedia:
"Offset printing is a commonly used printing technique where the inked image is transferred (or "offset") from a plate to a rubber blanket, then to the printing surface. When used in combination with the lithographic process, which is based on the repulsion of oil and water, the offset technique employs a flat (planographic) image carrier on which the image to be printed obtains ink from ink rollers, while the non-printing area attracts a water-based film (called "fountain solution"), keeping the non-printing areas ink-free."
Some of the advantages of litho printing are:
Consistent high quality images, quick and easy production of the printing plates, plates last longer than direct litho printing and the cost of mass print production is very low as the main costs go into plate production and set up.
This image shows how an offset litho press works, where there is a rubber roller between the plate roller, and the paper which transfers the image.
From Wikipedia:
"Offset printing is a commonly used printing technique where the inked image is transferred (or "offset") from a plate to a rubber blanket, then to the printing surface. When used in combination with the lithographic process, which is based on the repulsion of oil and water, the offset technique employs a flat (planographic) image carrier on which the image to be printed obtains ink from ink rollers, while the non-printing area attracts a water-based film (called "fountain solution"), keeping the non-printing areas ink-free."
Some of the advantages of litho printing are:
Consistent high quality images, quick and easy production of the printing plates, plates last longer than direct litho printing and the cost of mass print production is very low as the main costs go into plate production and set up.
This image shows how an offset litho press works, where there is a rubber roller between the plate roller, and the paper which transfers the image.
Finished Leaflets...
Tuesday, 25 November 2008
Presentation Boards...
Friday, 21 November 2008
James Bond...
I went to see Quantum of Solace a few weeks ago. You know how you talked about the good bits and the bad bits afterward, well it was then that I realised that my favourite part was the opening credits, and not just generally. The images/animation was bloody awful and made you feel a bit sick, but the typography animation was so cool. The video below shows the horrible animations and amazing typography, even though it isn't brilliantly clear, you get the idea.
Wednesday, 19 November 2008
Texture and depth...
In the past couple of days I have been enhancing my illustration work to give it a bit more depth and tactility. I have incorporated textured fill colours, rather than flat fill colours into the images so give them a bit more impact. I have done this with the posters, and leaflets so that they show continuity. Spring, Summer and Autumn leaflet covers are shown, and the Spring poster illustration.
Photographs and presentation mock ups...
Whilst putting together my presentation boards I found that I hadn't included a range of the photographs I took at the beginning of this brief. The image here is of my mock up presentation board that shows the photos that I decided not to use for this brief.
Thank you to Louise, for putting up with the sun in her eyes xx
Thank you to Louise, for putting up with the sun in her eyes xx
Saturday, 15 November 2008
Leaflet Design...
Wednesday, 12 November 2008
Seasons...
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Designer, Blogger, Cake Addict...
- Alex Bucktin
- United Kingdom
- Hi, I'm a Graphic Designer, just graduated from Leeds College of Art and now looking to start life in the real world. Currently living in Harpenden, Hertfordshire and looking for a job of some description. This blog is the result of three years of forced, but quite enjoyable blogging about my work. Expect to find general ramblings, links to great design and the odd muffin recipe.
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Blog Archive
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2008
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November
(15)
- Pearlfisher...again
- Jamie Oliver
- Packaging...
- CMYK Characters...
- Faber & Faber
- Strange Comparison...
- OUGD 201_Design Production_Evaluation
- Litho Printing...
- Finished Leaflets...
- Presentation Boards...
- James Bond...
- Texture and depth...
- Photographs and presentation mock ups...
- Leaflet Design...
- Seasons...
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November
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Favourite Quotes
- "It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a single man in possession of a good fortune, must be in want of a wife" - Pride and Prejudice
- "A heart is not judged by how much you love; but by how much you are loved by others" - The Wizard of Oz
- "Nothing saves anyone's life sir. It just postpones their death" - Posner, The History Boys