Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Summary of Paula Scher

Paula Scher is an internationally known and respected designer and artist.  She was born October 6, 1948 in Washington D.C. and currently resides in New York City.  She moved there after graduating from Tyler School of Art in Elkins, PA in 1970 with a BFA.  Scher has taught at various art schools including School of Visual Arts in New York and Tyler School of Arts after receiving her Doctorate of Fine Arts from Corcoran College of Art & Design.

Scher's most well known designs are logos and packaging from companies like Citi bank, Tiffany & co., Target, and many others.  Her designs include work in identity design, packaging design, publication design, and environmental graphics.

Her current personal artwork is a painting series started in the early 1990's and is based on topological maps which are skewed to her point of view of that place.  These maps comment on our world of information overload in a deeply personal way.


Quotes from Paula Scher about her art:

"My paintings are personal, overt, admitting skewing of information."

"I didn't stop being a graphic designer to become a painter.  One informs the other and I am richer for both."

Tuesday, November 29, 2011

Website Sketch

My Designer is Paula Scher and this is the sketch/idea I have for my website:

Friday, November 18, 2011

CSS Basics

Chapter 1: Introduction to CSS
This chapter talks about the different ways to use CSS coding.  There is both internal stylesheets (coded inside the <head> tag in html), and external stylesheets (coded in a separate CSS file).  There is also inline styles that define the style of specific text, but it would take a long time to use inline styles (coded inside HTML) on all text, and is especially inefficient if the text will have the same style.
Chapter 2: CSS Syntax
This chapter is about how CSS code is written.  There is a selector and a declaration.  Within the declaration is the property and value.  You can combine selectors if multiple types of text are going to have the same style.  Comment tags can be used to explain to others who may be looking at your code, why you wrote what you wrote.
Chapter 3: CSS Classes
CSS classes are used to change the style of a specific word or phrase in your CSS file.
Chapter 4: CSS ID’s
ID’s are similar to classes, except once a specific id has been declared it cannot be used again within the same HTML file.

Monday, November 14, 2011

Creating a Resume using HTML coding

I used a lot of lists to organize my resume into a readable format.  This is the result.
This is the code that I wrote for my resume.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Learning HTML using HTML dog

This is the HTML code that I wrote.

This is the result of the HTML code in Safari Browser

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Magazine Cover in Progress

First I merged my captured image with my scanned image using layers and masks.  I didn't want an unrealistic, flat background, so I played with the opacity so that some of the original background still showed through.

Next I added a Gaussian Blur to the whole photo after flattening it and saving it in another file name.  I created a gradient of blur so that the cupcakes up front are in focus, but the ones in the back are not.  This will also make it easier to read the type in the masthead.

Next I placed the image into InDesign and added my masthead to the image, changing the colors to work with my image.
Next changes were made to the Masthead to make it more legible.

An illustration was added for the "Zombie Cupcakes"

Colors were altered to be more legible.

"Blood" was added to the cupcakes as an illustration in illustrator and then merged to the background image in photoshop.

Text was added for the featured stories.

The stories were moved around to find the most aesthetically pleasing and legible design.