- Project 1; digital photographic images. Submit strongest three (edit wisely)
- Project 2; digital book (turn in book -- don't worry, you'll get it back ASAP)
- Project 2a; photo-to-movie sequence (.mov file)
- Project 3; false history hoax project
- Project 4; Video project (I have them already; no need to turn in unless revised)
- Project 5; Movie Poster (I have them already; no need to turn in unless revised)
- Project 6; Digital Art Project. Turn in Layered photoshop file and written component.
Monday, April 19, 2010
Final Portfolio
Monday, April 12, 2010
Open project
- photo
- photo manipulations
- photo montages
- sequences
- photo to movie
- vector art; hand drawn, live-trace (Illustrator)
- vector and raster together (Illustrator)
- video
- design and layout
Tuesday, March 23, 2010
Video Due Dates
Monday, March 22, 2010
Video Promotional Poster
Imagine that your video is being screened at national short film festival. Create a movie poster to promote it. Think big. Your final design should consist of imagery, typography, and layout that compellingly sells your video. Think about the genre of your video (comedy, horror, drama, experimental, etc.) and how you might create a design that reflects that. Are there distinctive visuals from your video that you can riff on? What kind of typography will work best? Layout? It will be helpful to look at examples of existing posters within certain genres. A great place to do this is the website:
Check out the categories "best" and "worst" from each year. You can learn a lot this way.
Your design should include all the appropriate details for a movie poster, such as title, tagline, actors, credits, images, etc., and should be as believable as possible. Use any and all of the techniques we have covered so far (and perhaps others you invent) to produce your final design. The image content should be created in Photoshop and/or Illustrator, using best practices, such as layers, adjustment layers, layer masks, etc. The final design and typography will be set in InDesign. Don’t work… we’ll go over that soon.
Monday, February 22, 2010
Critique Questions for Hoax Project Draft 1
- Which of the two comps seems the most convincing, so far?
- Which design / concept seems to hold the most promise, as a whole?
- Do the image(s) support the concept in a plausible way?
- Why or why not? Technical, photoshop reasons? Photographic reasons? Lighting, scale, focus, etc? Design concerns? Other?
- How could either of the two be improved?
- Are there positive elements from each that might be combined -- drawing strength from both?
- Do you think it will "go viral"? What might help?
Tuesday, February 16, 2010
False History Hoax Project
- Image must combine at least three separate photographic sources
- The event must be easily discerned -- we should be able to "get it"/understand
- All source material must be of good image quality (not pixelated on screen)
- Source images may be appropriated from the web, scanned, or shot
- Images must be combined in a convincing fashion that suspends disbelief in a photo-realist way
- To do this, take into account lighting, scale, color, masking, context
- Photoshop selection and masking techniques *as demonstrated in class* must be used and evident in files.
- Two initial comps, one refined image
- If you can make the image "go viral" on the web (and prove it!), you get extra credit. It might be useful to choose a timely subject to do this.