Thursday, 27 May 2010

Week 3



In the third week I was trusted more with bigger projects and responsibility, which felt great. I finally settled into a really good routine where I was happy and comfortable with my surroundings.
I was given a bit of free reign with my creativity when I had to design a few options for a poster for Brantano. "Sole Searcher" was the title, and the aim was to advertise the last chance to buy certain varieties of shoes. Some designs had been done previously, so I Already knew they wanted an 80's theme because of "sole" and "soul". I learnt a few techniques here, such as placing objects into shapes, which is very useful and I can use it in many ways. There was a lot of layout issues to work through, and I chose an alternative colour scheme. Overall I was quite pleased with the results. I placed this into a presenter which is expected at the end of every project like this and they are becoming common knowledge to me, so I can quickly produce it now.




There were more amends, mostly to seasonal promotions, images and text needing to be dropped into place. I had to amend various things for Brantano, such as job vacancies, manager contact cards and vouchers for different stores. When different content needs to be entered it can be annoying because of words looking odd at the end of a paragraph etc and suddenly a quick job can take a bit longer.



An interesting challenge was a button on their website - the user needed to click on this to access the page to print off their voucher. The specifications were very small, which is understandable for a website, but it brought up issues of legibility and I had to make it work.
I have also been working of some promotional food posters for 'Love food' which will be put up in a school. They wanted two for each month; one celebrating an event or holiday and the other trying to encourage eating more healthy food. I did many variations of images and colour ways so there is lots to choose from.

Monday, 24 May 2010

Week 2

The next week at Caramba I am carrying on doing similar things, just making small amendments to various projects. I was given the responsibility of updating a leaflet for Brantano, a page created for kids to keep them entertained whilst in the store. A competition to win an ipod from last year needed the newer model dropping in. I spent a while on it because I knew how many were going to be printed!

Other work included helping to create postcards to send out to various companies. Caramba are constantly targeting new potential companies to work for, something that I didn't expect. I thought that the other companies would be targeting them, although they are only a small company. Their idea was to send out a postcard every month with big headings that look like they mean the total opposite, e.g. "We don't want your job" and on the other side "...we want your business". I think they're really catchy, and a good idea as if one was sent with lots of information on it, it would get thrown away. These keep pestering and may catch a company at an vulnerable time. With this I had to choose clever images to go with each caption. They were in turn altered to include the company's colours of orange and purple, also garish yet eye catching. For smaller companies they went for a different tact; for food establishments they had a picture of two pears and used the play on words, being very personal. I have also worked on ones for local schools and these were cheeky using phrases from school like "Please see me" which can be used literally too.




Following on from last week I designed a menu board for LoveFood and a takeaway menu for Spice of Life. A lot of the images have already been created so its a case of trying different layouts. Again, I put these in situ. I also created an order form for BlueBox POS which was quite tricky working to such a small scale.

Monday, 17 May 2010

Week 1




So my 1st week of being in a real graphics studio environment.Initial meetings and greeting over, we started off with putting signs into context. Caramba do a lot of graphics for food and catering, so it was mainly placing directional and informative signs in real situations. The process starts off with a brief form Mark, who gathers all of the information from the companies, and we go through each photograph from the site and draw on where everything goes. I'm quite comfortable with this as I have done some before, but a few pictures need a lot of cloning and airbrushing where the previous sign was bigger than the new one. This was more challenging for me, but with a bit of persistence and a lot of keyboard shortcuts learned I managed to get them out in a reasonable time.Other work in the week included doing amends, where the client had changed their minds for work such as leaflets, and I had to alter the content to their needs. It is surprising that some work can be done once or twice and it is fine, yet others get sent backwards and forwards to make certain that everything is correct. These are usually the bigger clients and businesses.The studio is split up into 2 teams. The A-team works on many different and smaller projects, where as the B-team have large and few clients, such as Brantano. From talking to people in the B-team, I have found that they have little opportunity for creativity. Everything is very precise and the client has a certain "feel" that needs to come across on each piece of work.
I have also had a play around on Sketchup, a free 3D program that is sometimes used for visualising the end look of a room with all signage in place, when the building is being re-fitted etc. I found it quite fun because I haven't used anything like it before, and also is good experience for me if I do go down the packaging line.
Towards the end of the week I created a new layout for POS products (plastic casing etc). It needed to be more clean and professional and this was achieved in an afternoon. Simple things such as learning a few new shortcuts make all the difference.

The atmosphere is very relaxed, and I was pleasantly surprised to see these people who have been in the graphics industry for around 10 years still shout out for help on certain programs. As asking for help has never been one of my favourite things to do, this has boosted my confidence.