Simple Design Idea : Big images with small text
Posted by Jennifer Farley | April 25, 2008 | 1 Comment
If you’re creating a flyer or a poster, or any kind of design work, often you’ll have an image and some text provided and your job is to make them look good together while conveying a message. Contrast is a great way to add visual interest to your work and grab the viewer’s attention. You can achieve contrast in a number of different ways - large type in headings with small body type, a cold colour with a warm colour and so on. The idea I’m talking about here is how to use a big image with small text.
So to look at a couple of examples;
Here’s a postcard for a gallery advertising their midnight sale. Very, very simple with just a huge alarm clock to draw attention to the time of the sale.

If you don’t have a photographic image but have a bit of clip art to use, go bold. Make the clip art big and the text small. Clip art doesn’t have to look crap!

Both of these designs are set up so that the artwork takes up about two-thirds of the width of display area, and the text is kept very small in the remaining third. It’s easy to do and very effective.
Typography Inspiration
Posted by Jennifer Farley | April 24, 2008 | 1 Comment
Here’s a three and a half minute clip of some lovely posters, hand painted by the students at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam. The first part of the clip is brilliant - showing one of the students making it look SOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO easy - because he’s so talented.
Lots of imagination here.
This video is a typographic “treatment” of the old Abbot and Costello routine of “Who’s on first”. It’s very nicely done. There’s actually tons of this type of thing on youtube but I really liked this.
Design Inspiration : Getting Medieval
Posted by Jennifer Farley | April 20, 2008 | Leave A Comment
BBC4 are showing a season of programs about life in Medieval times. The programs are covering everything from crime in the 14 and 1500’s to the oldest cookbook in Britain.
For anyone interested in printing, Stephen Fry presented a program about the Guthenburg press. The program showed how the experts think the press was made, because obviously there are no pictures or descriptive diagrams of the press. They then built a wooden press from scratch. He also created some metal type at a foundry, which was beautiful, laid it out and printed a page on some hand made paper created from rags - 15th century style.
The Medieval Season came to my attention (and the reason for this post) is because BBC have been showing a very cool ad for it. The ad shows images from that time, set to a version of Jimi Hendrix’s “Purple Haze” played on medieval instruments. I just love the combination of the music with the animation of the medieval symbols and imagery. You can see the ad below.
Women Web Designers
Posted by Jennifer Farley | April 17, 2008 | 12 Comments
Tara over at the Graphic Design blog has an interesting post questioning why there are so few women web designers about. I’m wondering if there are loads of us out there but maybe women might be quieter on the promotion front?
Are there any women web designers reading today? Say hello in the comments and get some link love!
Design A Postcard
Posted by Jennifer Farley | April 9, 2008 | 4 Comments
An Post (the Irish Postal service) are inviting anyone and everyone to design their own postcard as part of a large exhibition that will tour Ireland in 2009. The idea is to design and make a postcard then send the card to An Post. The design can be absolutely anything and this sounds like a great opportunity for anyone interested in graphic design or art to get their work seen. Here’s an example of a previously designed card;

I’m definitely going to put together a few designs myself and send them on. This involves something I haven’t done for a long time - buying a few stamps!! You can find more details here on the An Post C Both Sides website.
Inspiration
Posted by Jennifer Farley | April 4, 2008 | 3 Comments
Nothing to say here except, Genius.

Lego Picture by Mike Stimpson
See the full set here:







