Posts Tagged ‘graphic design’

New Work: Bar Branding & Signage

Friday, June 12th, 2009

point-logo

Last summer I re-branded a University bar called The Point and have only recently found time to actually visit and photograph it. The final logo design can be seen above - set in Clarendon, one of my favourite typefaces. It is simple and clear but also carries the necessary qualities of character and style, making it visually appealing and easily recognisable.

The logo appears in the bar as a lightbox sign above the entrance (see photo below) and as faux frosted glass window decals, which are a cheap and subtle yet highly effective touch. The lightbox artwork was designed by myself in Adobe Illustrator then fabricated and installed by Merrill Brown, who did a great job with a quick turnaround. If you are based in the midlands and need building signage making, then you could do a lot worse than go to these guys. Ask for Tony - he’ll see you right.

The Point sign

I am due to re-brand another bar on the main campus this summer, so will write a follow up post on it in due course.

(Almost) Everything I Know About Magazine Design - part 2

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

*This is part 2 in a series outlining my process for designing a bi-monthly magaazine in full-colour tabloid format. For part 1, covering document and template setup , see here.

* be warned: this is a long article - you might want to bookmark it as there is a lot of information crammed into it.

Laying out content (basics)

A handful of pages are regular features and are laid out to a set template. I leave this template in place from the previous issue, deleting the old content and making the necessary tweaks once the new content has been placed.

One thing of note: InDesign has a layers system like Photoshop and many people use it in the same way, but I don’t - I do everything on one layer. Don’t even pay any attention to the layers menu palette; there’s no need to use it on a magazine of this size - you can move elements on the same layer in front or behind one another by using the ‘arrangement’ function - things are much more managable on one layer. (so why does it exist? you’re probably wondering… well, it has it’s uses in the design of publications of high page count or when special inking methods are required, but the design of small-ish standard publications doesn’t really need to be concerned with this function.)

The bulk of the feature content is usually one page interviews comprising of a photo/illustration, headline, standfirst, contributor credits, body text punctuated with a pull quote and a footer with further information and a weblink. I’ll walk you through my process by using a sample page from the magazine - it’s not the most visually exciting page I’ve ever done, but works as a good example for covering pretty much everything you need to be aware of…

layout step 1

My usual method is to wait until I have both the images and text before laying out a page, unless I know exactly what to expect. This way I know what I have to work with and don’t waste time on layouts which the contents don’t fit. I’ll draw two content boxes on the page and import the main image into one and the text document into the other. Then I cut and paste the headline, standfirst and pull quotes from the text into their own text boxes. Next, i’ll set the body text to 8pt Serifa in a text box of full page width with 3 coumns, to give me a starting point (see image above). This gives me a good idea with how much space the text takes up, and what I have left to play with for the image, headline and standfirst. In the case of this page, I knew I was getting a portrait image, so designed the layout accordingly…

layout-step2

I’ll usually sit the pull quote somewhere inside the body copy, one column wide (sometimes two), to visually break up the main article. By putting a text wrap on the box the quote is in, the body copy will flow round it (see screenshot of pull quote box and text wrap menu below - you can pad out the spacing above and below the pull quote to even out the gaps in the body text . In this case I didn’t need to make any adjustments so the padding is set to zero. This is very rare; just put in whatever numbers work best in each situation and go by eye - between 1 and 5mm usually works) . I try to place the quote so that it falls in the break between two paragraphs, as it is a point which provides a natural pause for the reader.

layout-quote1

My aim is to always lay the text out in a way which means the reader has to move their eye as little as possible when reading a page. This makes it easier for them to follow the piece without expending too much mental energy trying to follow the layout. There’s plenty of studies out there showing that difficult text layouts cause readers to struggle to retain the information in a piece, or even read it in the first place. I generally place the text in the bottom half of the page to keep it compact and use the image and headline in the top half. Don’t just look at the page design, try actually reading the article once you’ve laid it out and see if it feels akward at any point.

Try to avoid making the reader having to make their eyes jump from the bottom of a page at the end of one column all the way to the top of the page for the start of the next column - this is one of the reasons why I usually set the text in the bottom half the page; this way the reader only ever has to scan half the height of the page to get from one column to the next.

layout step 3

My usual approach is to use one image as large as fits best on the page - we have a good selection of photographers and illustrators, so I like to use their work as large and untouched as possible (just tweaking for optimum output on newsprint) to let it sing on the page. Then I’ll adjust the number of body text columns to give the best alignment of image and text. In this case I left the column count at 3, as this allowed the image to be used as large as possible and line up nicely with the left edge of the middle column.

The image will usually go at the top of the page, but can be anywhere which works - footers and cornerpieces which bleed off the edge are pretty effective (The photo here is bleeding off the top and right edges of the page). Headlines have a free reign; sometimes they sit at the top of the page, sometimes below the main image directly above the text, or to the side of a portrait image, or they can be ran overlaying or as part of an image.

Having the headline in advance of the layout is pretty crucial for me - you know how many words you have to play with and how they can break to fit different spaces, and they often give you ideas for design approaches which echo the sentiment of the headline (knowing the headline on this page was just two short words allowed me to use this layout as I could fit the headline next to the image using the width of only one column. A longer headline would have probably forced me to run it acros the full width of the page). Marrying image and design with content so they communicate an idea in a unified clear way is the holy grail of mag design, so always aim to play the two off each other where you can.

General Workflow

I like to get a few pages laid out roughly so that i can get a feel for the pacing of the magazine, then I’ll go back and add the design touches - choosing headline fonts, colour schemes and page order on a magazine-wide basis rather than a page at a time. My style is pretty minimal; I work to a grid and use colour sparingly, mainly to highlight things I want to draw attention to. I’ll wait until I have most of the images for the mag on the page before deciding on which colour scheme to use for headlines and design flourishes, sticking to only a couple of prominent colours which complement the overall feel of the issue best.

My type choices are pretty narrow these days. I used to use all kinds of crazy fonts, wanting to mix things up as much as possible. Now I go for quiet harmony and balance, aiming to present the text and images in an easily digestable visually balanced and aethetically pleasing way without the design getting in the way of the content.

All body copy is set in 8pt Serifa throughout the mag. Questions in bold, body copy in roman, and things like film or record title in italics. It’s best to keep the same body copy font and point size throught the mag for consistency - changing font can work, but is tricky to get right; changing point size looks fine on individual pages, but looks unprofessional when it keeps changing in a magazine for no real reason. I spent a long time experimenting with different fonts and point sizes before settling on the current scheme and I’m still happy with it five years later. I even know of a local design agency Creative Director who uses my pages as a studio reference guide on how to type set, so it definitely works.

layout step 5

I usually use the same typeface for standfirsts too, set in 14-21pt depending on the amount of text and size of the article. It works great for headlines too, title case or caps, and you could feasibly do a very tidy mag using it as the only font, but it is obviously better to break it up a bit and add some other fonts to the mix. I like to use bold serif or textured fonts on the headlines and contrast them with more elegant headline typefaces where appropriate. I sometimes use the headline font for the standfirst when I think it fits (as in the case of this example page). Printing a headline out, tracing it by hand and scanning it back in is a good trick to get some texture on the page.

One thing that really helps is to print the pages out once they are in a reputable state and put them up on a wall, in order, so you can see the magazine structure.  This helps you make changes in the context of the overall publication, helping you achieve consistency, repetition and rhythm. Things I think about when looking at the prinouts are: How do the images and colours flow through the mag? Is the use of fonts balanced? Do the pages work as spreads? Are any backgrounds/boxes too dark? Is everything legible?

layout quote 2

Once I get a few pages in shape, I’ll send them to the editor for approval before tightening up the details and making amendments. When I get to the amendments stage and know things like the headline won’t change, I’ll start tweaking the details of the page, like kerning the headlines. It’s very rare to get a headline which doesn’t need kerning to some degree - they pretty much always need some adjustment - even if it’s just one pair - and I hate to see a bad one in print, so I always pay attention to this. This headline needed some reduced kerning to squeeze it in at the desired point size. I used an italic font so the slope of the N in ‘prawN‘ matched the angle of the fish next to it. I also incresed the size of the quote marks in the pull quote as they make a nice decorative feature and help make the quote a visual element, not just a block of text.

Tip: Watch out for ‘widowlines’ - single lines of text on their own - tinker with the layout to make sure the offending line either connects back with the paragraph it belongs to, or that another line is pushed over to the next column so that there are two lines together, rather than one on its own. Similarly, watch out for ‘widows’ - single words on their own line at the end of a paragraph - either shrink or expand the letterspacing in the para to pull the word back onto the line of text above, or push a word or two over onto the bottom line. Try not to make adjustments to the letterspacing of a para by more than +/- 10-15% - it starts imparing the legibility and becomes easily noticeable in relation to the rest of the body copy.

layout step 6

The other thing I look for is making sure each page looks balanced and isn’t too cramped or too loose. Here the page was a little loose and bland for my liking, so I added the illustration of the fish falling in and out of the fishseller’s basket, which adds visual interest and works as a border with the fish bleeding off the page edges. To stop the text running into the fish illustration, I traced round the outline of the fish border with the pen tool to create a solid shape with no stroke or fill, then added a text wrap to it in the same way I did for the pull quote.

I also coloured the headline and pull quote pink to echo the prawn-y sentiment of the headline. There’s no page number on this example page, as it would have been hidden by the border (I’m not fussed about having a page number on every page - one on every spread is enough, I think; nobody is gonna get lost).  With hindsight I should have had a page  number on there anyway, poking out from behind the border, partly obscured by the fish. Tricks like this add the illusion of depth to the flat format of the printed page; even the subtlest details can make a big difference. Here’s the finished page:

finished page

I think that’s about it in terms of general page layout duties. I haven’t really addressed any technical issues with preparing artwork for print, as I’ll cover that later in the series along with do and dont’s, more tips on good practice and pre-press setup and other useful bits and bobs. Until such time, I bid you adieu.

LeftLion Issue 29

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

LeftLion issue 29 cover

The latest edition of LeftLion hit the mean streets of Nottingham this weekend, with a cover feature on the World Twenty20 cricket tournament. The fixtures are being held at four grounds around the country this month, including Trent Bridge (which was host to Australia’s exit yesterday - sorry boys, you just couldn’t cut it, see you when you hand over the ashes…). The tournament is being broadcast around the world on satellite television and is expected to reach an audience of half a billion people!

We came up with a cover concept which depicted the difference in scale of watching a cricket match on tv and being at the real thing, aiming to encourage people to take advantage of the event happening in their own back yard (Nottingham’s a small place).

The idea we ran with was the photo you see above; a shot of two people watching cricket on tv, as if in their lounge, but set up on the pitch at Trent Bridge. I wanted to use a photograph to bring a sense of realism to the viewer’s perspective, giving the impression of being closer to the scene than illustration could have achieved. I like the way it plays with the idea of scale and proximity, reflecting the two viewpoints from which people will experience the event.

It was a pretty simple shot to set up (Trent Bridge’s marketing guy was on side), the only hiccup being having to reschedule the shoot date due to bad weather (English cricket grounds are, of course, used to having such circumstances delay proceedings, so it wasn’t too much of a problem). Second time around we got good weather with an enticing blue sky, so I set everything up on the rug at the corner of the pitch, making sure to inlcude the scoreboard, poured prop drinks for the people in the chairs and was done in about ten minutes.

The coverline in the sky seals the deal, helping make sense of the image and bringing the whole cover together. It also has a bright, colourful quality to it which makes for a nice seasonal progression for this year’s covers so far: white and stark in winter (issue 27), flowers in spring (issue 28) and green grass and blue skies for summer. I think the next issue could be due a far-out cover illustration.

New Work: Bus Illustration

Friday, May 15th, 2009

pathfinder illustration

Here’s an illustration I did as part of a pitch for a poster campaign on reducing bus fees on a local rural route.

Pen drawing coloured in illustrator.

(Almost) Everything I know about magazine design - part 1

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

THIS IS THE FIRST in a series of articles outlining the process I use when designing a magazine. The information in this first post is mainly aimed at newbies and is very basic, just covering setting up the document and blank page templates in InDesign (in great detail - probably way too much for anybody familiar with the program).

I’ll get into the juicy details of page design in part 2. In the meantime, this is a good introduction for anyone new to using InDesign for magazine production.

LeftLion magazine covers

*All of this information relates to the process I use when designing LeftLion magazine - a bi-monthly free magazine printed on newsprint in full-colour full-bleed tabloid supplement format. The printer spec is for the magazine to be supplied as single page PDF files, rather than spreads or any other multiple page setup (for which i would use a slightly different setup and export method, which i must write up at some point). All instructions are for setup using InDesign on a PC (the process should be roughly the same on a Mac, but dialog boxes and naming conventions may differ.

Setting up the documents

The first thing I do is setup the page templates in inDesign. For LeftLion, the page size is 280×380mm with all four page margins set at 10mm; and bleed set at 5mm on all four edges. As I like to vary the number of columns i use on the various pages within the mag, I leave the page columns setting as 1 (this just stops me having to look at unneccessary column guides while I’m working on the page). If I used a standard number of columns on all pages, I would use this number as my columns setting.

InDesign page setup dialog box

I never layout a publication on a single page template - I always work on the pages as spreads (check the ‘facing pages’ option when setting up the document in InDesign). The reader is going to to experience the layout as spreads, so it should be worked on and laid out accordingly. You get a better feel for the structure and pacing of the mag working on it that way.  It’s best not to do the full magazine one one document, though - the amount of picture links it would end up containing would make it unnecessarily slow to work with. What I do is create 3 documents - one for the front section of the magazine, which goes from the cover to the page before the centrespread.

This is a convenient place to split the layout documents up, as the centrespread will be laid out as one landscape document, which requires its own double-width template (560×380mm). The third document is basically a copy of the front document, but is used for the back half of the magazine. You can open your blank front section document and save a copy of it as the back section layout document, but before doing that, it is worth adding common elements such as extra margin guides, page numbers etc. to the front document so that they are included in the back section template when you save it as a copy.

LeftLion page footer
It is good practice to leave more space as the bottom of the page than at the top - it stops the content looking like it is falling of the page and provides space to include page numbers. I place a horizontal ruler guide 15mm from the bottom of the page and use this to align the bottom of my body text or other content to. Then I add page numbers to the bottom outer corners of the pages, aligned flush with the vertical margin (10mm in from the outer edge, so it lines up with the content above) and flush beneath the bottom margin, which gives it 5mm breathing space from the content above.

Once I’ve done this, I’ll save a copy of the front template as the back template (as mentioned above) and change the page numbers. I find it useful to go into the numbering and section options menu of the back template document and set the page numbers to start from the same page number as the back section (ie. if I am producing a 32 page magazine, the first page of the back half will be page 18, so i would set the back section document to begin from page 18). This way, the document mirrors the page numbers of the magazine and makes it easier to jump to the correct page in the document using inDesign’s page selection buttons at the bottom left of screen.

InDesign sections and numbering dialog

I also put the same footer margin on the centrespread and paste the page numbers on from one of the previous documents.

Now I have three files for the whole magazine, ready to have content placed on them and laid out - something I’ll cover in part 2 of this series next week, which will be much more exciting, I promise.

New Work: Virtually Stolen campaign

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Virtually Stolen campaign flyers

IT SEEMS THAT even with the credit crunch hitting hard, there are still plenty of people out there with more money than sense. As such, it has been noticed that many people seem quite happy to leave their property lying around for lightfingered strangers to help themselves to.

Two of the most popular gadgets people carry with them on a day-to-day basis are  iPods and mobile phones (the iPhone being the must-have model). So, when I was asked by a local university to design some flyers for Virtually Stolen, a campaign to raise awareness about gadget theft, it seemed obvious to incorporate these two high-profile items into the design.

The brief was to design some A7 flyers which could be slipped underneath unattended gadgets to show the neglectful owners how easy it would have been for their precious (or perhaps not-so-precious) property to have been stolen. Luckily, the size of iPods and iPhones made it possible to fit a recognisable portion of their outline at actual size on the flyers. This has the great effect of allowing a flyer to be arranged underneath an offending object without obscuring any of the text explaining its purpose.

It also has the added quality of visually getting the message across when the flyers are seen without the relevant object placed on top of them - the printed outline of a phantom iPhone/iPod accompanied by the words ‘Virtually Stolen’ making it quite obvious what they are referring to.

New Business Cards

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

business-card-web

My new business cards arrived last week and they look sweet! The front is black on black with a UV spot varnish on the lettering (very 80’s, I know). Printed on heavy stock with a matte laminate finish by Aubergine Print in Southwell, who I highly recommend as a specialist business card printer. Their prices are great, but not at the expense of quality - these things feel even better than they look, and the stock response from people who I have been giving them to has been along the lines of “Ooh, these are really nice - I’ll be hanging on to this”.

I never really expected much of a response to giving out a business card, but it would seem that a well designed card with some thought put into it, rather than just settling for a utilitarian design, can get people’s attention. Besides, as a graphic designer, you’ve got to have a natty business card, right? - it’s a chance to show your skills as well as pass on your contact deets.

New Work - Fairtrade table menus

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

fairtrade menus

I FINALLY GOT AROUND to photographing these table-top menus I did for a local bar a few weeks ago -  A6 cards advertising Fairtrade tea and cakes. I wanted people looking at the menu to be almost able to taste the cakey goodness and smell the tea, so decided to use close up photography to emphasize the sugary texture on the cherry slice (which meant I got to unwrap it; and also meant I got to eat it). Ditto the scattered tealeaves (which is actually a rare instance of me using stock photography) - they help to conjure up the sweet smell of fresh tea. Text is set in ITC Lubalin, coloured to echo the  blue and green of the Fairtrade logo.

Can Design Save Newspapers?

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

There is a brief but insightful talk by Jacek Utko on design’s role in newspapers at ted.com. He discusses how his re-designs of Eastern European publications have led to an increase in circulation by typically a third; making several good points along the way. Its definitely worth a watch if you are involved in publications design or production on any level. He talks about making posters, not pages, which had always been my motto since I started designing magazines.

Also, he mentions how important it is to think of a magazine as a whole composition which requires pacing and balance, rather than just dealing with each page individually; something too many people overlook. Whenever I  am designing a magazine, the pages get printed out and taped onto a wall in order so that i can adjust and re-arrange design elements until the whole thing flows as one piece. At the very least, designers should think in terms of spreads. I can’t imagine trying to lay out a magazine using single-page templates; the reader is going to perceive it as a whole, so it should be design accordingly.

His final point, following on from the increased circulation of the publications he has art-directed, is that design can have a dramatic impact on a business; designers should be be seen as a great asset and empowered to take more of a lead in decision-making. Couldn’t agree more.

LeftLion Issue 28

Wednesday, March 25th, 2009

ll28-cover

ISSUE 28 of LeftLion magazine is currently in the hands of the printers and due to hit the streets on Friday 27th March. This is my first issue operating solely as Art Director, with our new designer, Tom Wingrove, taking over page design duties. After the initial editorial and planning meetings, we agreed on the visual ideas for each page and then I left him pretty much to his own devices, offering only minimal advice beyond the necessary technical info.

This was partly due to a hectic personal schedule, but also to see what he did of his own accord without too much input from me. He has done a grand job, designing the mag with a very different personal style to my own. For one, I am big lover of The Grid and white space, using these as the basis for (almost) all my page layouts, designing through the subtleties of harmony, balance, restricted colour palettes and careful font choices; letting the content take precedent.

This issue shows a departure from this approach, with denser, much more varied layouts and use of images. It will be interesting to see in print and I’m also intrigued to see what our readers make of the new look. Ironically, the cover is one of the simplest and cleanest we have ever produced, which stands in contrast to the busy look of the interior pages.

The cover boasts an image of a record-wreath retirement present, styled by Rikki Marr, as a tribute to one of England’s greatest independent records shops, Selectadisc, which is closing its Nottingham branch after 43 years of business. Fact fans take note: the shop began as a market stall before expanding to become a real brick-walls-and-door shop with a branch in London which was immortalised on the cover of Oasis’ LP, What’s the Story, Morning Glory.

This cover is the second in sucession which uses a lot of white space, something we haven’t done traditonally, but I think we were totally right to on both occasions.  I can’t imagine the wreath on this cover having the same stark impact if it sat on a coloured background. Besides, despite what some people say, I think white space will always have a place in magazine design, as it allows the content to breathe on the page in such an inimitable way.