Monday, 8 December 2014

Screen Printing

Notes:
*Stenciling process - chemical properties (purple or green ink)
*Take screen to drying room (wait 10-15 mins without any sort of light)
*Clean material with sponge and water after every use
*Ear defenders and eye protection when cleaning 
*Block ultra violet light (whites will go through but blacks will stay)
*Must be careful due to the reaction our skin or eyes could have with the ultraviolet light

                                                                Process:


















Research:
Definition: Screen printing is a printing technique that uses a woven mesh to support an ink-blocking stencil to receive a desired image. The attached stencil forms open areas of mesh that transfer ink or other printable materials which can be pressed through the mesh as a sharp-edged image onto a substrate. A fill blade or squeegee is moved across the screen stencil, forcing or pumping ink through the mesh openings to wet the substrate during the squeegee stroke. Basically, it is the process of using a mesh-based stencil to apply ink onto a substrate, whether it be t-shirts, posters, stickers, vinyl, wood, or other material.
Screen printing is also a stencil method of print making in which a design is imposed on a screen of polyester or other fine mesh, with blank areas coated with an impermeable substance. Ink is forced into the mesh openings by the fill blade or squeegee and onto the printing surface during the squeegee stroke. As the screen rebounds away from the substrate the ink remains on the substrate. It is also known as silkscreenserigraphy, and serigraph printing. One color is printed at a time, so several screens can be used to produce a multicoloured image or design.
Meaning of words/techniques:
*Woven fabric is a textile formed by weaving. It is produced on a loom, and made of many threads woven on a warp and a weft.
*mesh is a barrier made of connected strands of metalfiber, or other flexible/ductile materials. A mesh is similar to a web or a net in that it has many attached or woven strands.
*Stencilling produces an image or pattern by applying pigment to a surface over an intermediate object with designed gaps in it which create the pattern or image by only allowing the pigment to reach some parts of the surface. The stencil is both the resulting image or pattern and the intermediate object; the context in which stencil is used makes clear which meaning is intended.
*Substrate is a term used in converting process such as printing or coating as a more general term to describe the base material onto which e.g. images will be printed. Base materials include (though are not limited to)
*squeegeesquilgee or sometimes squimjim, is a tool with a flat, smooth rubber blade, used to remove or control the flow of liquid on a flat surface. It is used for cleaning and in printing.



Wednesday, 3 December 2014

Group 10 - Study task 1 - OUGD 405

Group 10 - Fosters
Research:
Australian Brand.
Owned by the south African group SABmiller.
European rights to the brand are owned by Heineken.
Second highest selling beer after Carling.
Created by two Irish American Brothers - William M and Ralph R Foster.
Made available to the public from 1889.
steal cans were introduced in 1958.
2006 April - 309$ million. agreed to acquire the brand in EU.
August 2006- bought the brand in India for 120 $.
Fosters twist- beer with a hint of citrus (Marketed as a refreshing).
Fosters super chilled - Surved at a colder temperature
"Australian for beer"
"The Amber Nector"
"Fosters - get some Australian in you".

We researched on Fosters history, branding, marketing and compared it with different brands.
we then moved to creating a mind map with our different ideas and interpretations.

We first believed that the idea of 'chilling at the beach' wasn't working due to being more of an advert idea than our main concept.
we also tried representing the idea of friendship, by designing the F and the letter T in to hands shaking, hi 5, or even toasting with the foster beer.
Once again it was far from our concept idea.
We then moved to experimenting with the Australian map and the rearrangement of the letter 'F'. (Given that Australia is up side down to us).
Our message wasn't as clear when trying to play around with the negative spacing.
Our final and last design was keeping the main colors that the fosters brand are using but changing the 'O' letter, by giving the impression of someone drinking some refreshing beer from the letter.

                                                         Adds online:
    
ideas:

Sketches:
*
*
*


Photoshop:








final idea:



Monday, 1 December 2014

Studio Brief 2 Design process - research OUGD 405

100 ways to say "I love you" (Different languages)
1. Afrikaans – Ek het jou liefo
2. Albanian – Te dua
3. Arabic (to male) – Ana behibak
4. Arabic (to female) – Ana behibek
5. Armenian – Yes kez sirumem
6. Bambara – M’bi fe
7. Bengali – Ami tomake bhalobashi
8. Belarusian – Ya tabe kahayu
9. Bisaya – Nahigugma ako kanimo
10. Bulgarian – Obicham te
11. Cambodian – Soro lahn nhee ah
12. Catalan – T’estimo
13. Cherokee – Tsi ge yu i
14. Cheyenne – Ne mohotatse
15. Chichewa – Ndimakukonda
16. Chinese (Cantonese) – Ngo oiy ney a
17. Chinese (Mandarin) – Wo ai ni
18. Comanche – U kamakutu nu
19. Cree – Kisakihitin
20. Creole – Mi aime jou
21. Croatian – Volim te
22. Czech – Miluji te
23. Danish – Jeg Elsker Dig
24. Dutch – Ik hou van jou
25. Elvish – Amin mela lle
26. English – I love you 
27. Esperanto – Mi amas vin
28. Estonian – Ma armastan sind
29. Ethiopian – Afgreki’
30. Faroese – Eg elski teg
31. Farsi – Doset daram
32. Filipino – Mahal kita
33. Finnish – Mina rakastan sinua
34. French – Je t’aime, Je t’adore
35. Frisian – Ik hald fan dy
36. Gaelic – Ta gra agam ort
37. Georgian – Mikvarhar
38. German – Ich liebe Dich
39. Greek – S’agapo
40. Gujarati – Hoo thunay prem karoo choo
41. Hiligaynon – Palangga ko ikaw
42. Hawaiian – Aloha Au Ia`oe
43. Hebrew (to female) – "ani ohev otach" (said by male) "ohevet Otach" (said by female)
44. Hebrew (to male) – "ani ohev otcha" (said by male) "Ohevet ot’cha" (said by female)
45. Hiligaynon – Guina higugma ko ikaw
46. Hindi – Hum Tumhe Pyar Karte hae
47. Hmong – Kuv hlub koj
48. Hopi – Nu’ umi unangwa’ta
49. Hungarian – Szeretlek
50. Icelandic – Eg elska tig
51. Ilonggo – Palangga ko ikaw
52. Indonesian – Saya cinta padamu
53. Inuit – Negligevapse
54. Irish – Taim i’ ngra leat
55. Italian – Ti amo
56. Japanese – Aishiteru or Anata ga daisuki desu
57. Kannada – Naanu ninna preetisuttene
58. Kapampangan – Kaluguran daka
59. Kiswahili – Nakupenda
60. Konkani – Tu magel moga cho
61. Korean – Sarang Heyo or Nanun tangshinul sarang hamnida
62. Latin – Te amo
63. Latvian – Es tevi miilu
64. Lebanese – Bahibak
65. Lithuanian – Tave myliu
66. Luxembourgeois – Ech hun dech gaer
67. Macedonian – Te Sakam
68. Malay – Saya cintakan mu / Aku cinta padamu
69. Malayalam – Njan Ninne Premikunnu
70. Maltese – Inhobbok
71. Marathi – Me tula prem karto
72. Mohawk – Kanbhik
73. Moroccan – Ana moajaba bik
74. Nahuatl – Ni mits neki
75. Navaho – Ayor anosh’ni
76. Ndebele – Niyakutanda
77. Norwegian (Bokmaal) – Jeg elsker deg
78. Norwegian (Nyonrsk) – Eg elskar deg
79. Pandacan – Syota na kita!!
80. Pangasinan – Inaru Taka
81. Papiamento – Mi ta stimabo
82. Persian – Doo-set daaram
83. Pig Latin – Iay ovlay ouyay
84. Polish – Kocham CiÄ™
85. Portuguese – Eu te amo
86. Romanian – Te iubesc
87. Russian – Ya tebya liubliu
88. Scot Gaelic – Tha gra\dh agam ort
89. Serbian – Volim te
90. Setswana – Ke a go rata
91. Sign Language – ,\,,/ (represents position of fingers when signing ‘I Love You’)
92. Sindhi – Maa tokhe pyar kendo ahyan
93. Sioux – Techihhila
94. Slovak – Lu`bim ta
95. Slovenian – Ljubim te
96. Spanish – Te quiero / Te amo
97. Swahili – Ninapenda wewe
98. Swedish – Jag alskar dig
99. Swiss-German – Ich lieb Di
100. Surinam – Mi lobi joe


Different ways to show love:
Gender (sexual attraction)
Age (kids,adults,old couples)
Holding hands
Hugginge (kids,adults,old couples)

Different ways to be romantic?
Romantic Dinners
Roses 
Candles
Vacations (Hotel pictures)/Beach
Proposals
Weddings
Touristic love pictures


Same sex (Gay)
Same sex (Lesbians)
                                                                       Opposite sex

Kids kissing


                                                        kids holding hands
adults kissing

Adults holding hands
Adults hugging

                                                         old couple kissing
                                                 old couple hugging (race)
old couple holding hands

                                                    weddings

My first idea was to relate this brief within languages 
100 ways to say i love you around the world
My options/ideas: use touristic pictures

Other options: 
I always make posters with all the little tickets (bus,boats,trains) pictures, bracelets,map
Opinions during presentation/debating:
Touristic pictures seemed a very stereotypical thing to do
different and similar ways to show affection
make it unique
pictures of people taking pictures