graphic design

 

Insist on Mediocrity!

There is an alarming trend in the art and design. Not in the artists and craftsmen, but in the clients.  The trend is, an insistence on mediocrity.  It is often an attempt to make something universally appealing. I honestly don't think that's possible. Both fine art and good design can evoke emotion, often strong emotion.  You have to realize though, that they induce both positive emotional responses, and negative ones.  Some people like them very much, but others will dislike them.  The only way to eliminate this negative response group is to lower or eliminate the emotional impact. This can only result in mediocrity. Let's consider this in terms of color. Can you name an intense, universally appealing color? The answer is no, you can't. Some people will love red, while others will hate it. Want to make it more universally appealing? Dilute the emotional response, by diluting the color.  Diluting and mixing the colors won't get a universally appealing color though. It will get you beige. The solution? Don't try for universally appealing. Try to please you. Not a personal design, but a design that appeals to you personally. Like red? Then use it. While you can't make something universally appealing, you can make it appealing. Don't be afraid to make a statement, even if it isn't a strong one. Concerned about that negative response? It is something to keep in mind, but don't let that fear define the design.  The only way to rule out the possibility of a negative emotional response, is to remove any chance of an emotional response. That path leads to emotional beige, it leads to mediocrity. Don't go down that path, don't insist on mediocrity.

Riven Design

As you may have notice, I haven't blogged much lately. One of my recent endeavors has been doing web design at Riven Design. I've been doing web design with an emphasis on high quality imagery and accessibility, and some really fun print design as well.

Riven Design

A List Apart Design Survey

A List Apart - The Survey, 2008

Calling all designers, developers, information architects, project managers, writers, editors, marketers, and everyone else who makes websites. It is time once again to pool our information so as to begin sketching a true picture of the way our profession is practiced worldwide.

It's a very well written survey in my opinion. If you are a design professional, go help them out and take the survey.

I took the Survey!

Keeping up with Design

Somebody asked me a good question today. To paraphrase, it was "what websites do you use to keep up with what's going on in the industry?". Here's the list: While I don't write about blogging, I do follow what's going on with that industry. It's too much of a factor in the web design business not to.

Mostly I like to read about Art and Design. You'll notice that a number of these these sites aren't web or graphic design related. Web design needs to be inspired by all arts, not just other web design.

Inspiration can come from all kinds of interesting stuff.

I'm particularly fond of Search Feeds. Most people don't realize that a lot of search engines allow you to subscribe to the search. So you can be notified of anything new on the subject of your choice.

I also subscribe to a number of Technical Feeds. While some of these sites write about things outside of design, it's important to keep up on these too. The more I know about all aspects of my job, the better I can do my job. This might include how my computer and software work, how to improve them or how to fix them, and what's new in the industry .

I keep track of my subscriptions with the Sage feed reader for Firefox. I have posted elsewhere about other Firefox resources I regularly use.

PhotoShop Pattern Maker

I was already a fan of the PhotoShop Pattern Maker, but after that tutorial, I'll be looking at it from a new niewpoint. The use of it with the photo was interesting, but I loved the text pattern they created. I can see using some variation of this in print work.

The Design View Show

Andy Rutledge is now doing a design podcast called The Design View Show. As with his website, his subject is the fundamentals of design and communication. If you're not familiar with him, he has an incite full viewpoint on design.

Quiet

Andy Rutledge has a fascinating article on quiet structure

Quiet structure is achieved when you de–emphasize the structural elements; the containing boxes, structural lines, bullets, structural color elements, etc… and bring a rhythmical consistency to the layout.

I've recently been involved with several projects that involved this principle, though I've never heard this described quite so well.

About Classic Color Choices

Here is a website dedicated to color inspiration from the masters of painting. It clarifies master paintings down into a five color palette. A significant amount of the emotional nature of the painting is reflected in the choice of color. What do you want your work to say? Did you choose the right colors to do that? These aren't hard and fast rules of course. Just because Monet used a color palette to paint something serene, doesn't mean you can't use the same palette to show excitement. It is a good spot for inspiration however. See how someone else worked, and build upon the inspiration you find there.

h/t Basement.org

On Intuitive Naming

What did I name that? How many times have you asked yourself that? I know I've been there more than I care to think about. The way to get out of this rut is using intuitive naming. In both my graphic design and my web design work I've taken to being very careful about naming files. I have come up with simple file naming and storage location rules that make sense to me, and I follow them carefully. There are a lot of ways to do this, but the important part of me is that it has to be intuitive. Even if I can't remember a project, it takes just a little bit of information about it, and I should know where the file is stored, and what it's called. The same methods can be used for the HTML coding. I've recently been spending a lot of time doing HTML 508 compliance work on long and complex documents. This results in dozens of HTML pages with hundreds of figures, each with linked ALT Text, complex graphs and tables linked to pertinent information, multiple tables of contents, references, and appendices. The trick to keeping this all organized is coming up with a simple naming structure which allows the designer to always know what an anchor or link needs to be, without looking up the other half of the equation each time. The image for Figure 1 is figure-1.jpg, which links to the anchor alt-figure-1, which links back to the original. The same theme continues with chapter and section heading links, tables and graphs. Each name can be predicted by it's purpose. It allows for the complete job to be done sequentially, rather than having to keep all of the files open at once to match links and anchors. So can you remember what that file is called? Was the file name and location intuitive? It should be.

Design Software Alternatives

I've been meaning to look up cheap alternatives to the design software I currently use. Photoshop is fantastic, but it's expensive. What can I use on my home computer cheaper? Or on a laptop just for the occasional touch-up? Before I had the opportunity to look this up, I found that someone else had saved me the trouble. Creative Alternatives and Resources It's a fairly comprehensive list of what's available for the designer on a budget... or with no budget.

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