Category: <span>Uni</span>

reviewtollbooth.jpgSo much as to state that I have been busy and have only just hit my Google Reader after an absence of days and days. This is what uni has is stock for me. Because like it or not (and sometimes it is not), I do actually like the thing. I like my friends, on the whole I like my tutors and lecturers, I like the quirky people there that make me laugh, I like running into people I haven’t seen since first semester of the first year and still being able to say hello, I like that it’s forcing me to do things I don’t always want to do and showing me things that intrigue me, making me having good ideas when there are none and generally filling my head with all kinds of absurdities.

In a few weeks time I have to submit an essay on how designers are moving towards designing for environmental sustainability. This is not exciting in that the three set texts (one of which I must use), are all on very long wait lists at our somewhat pathetic uni-library. The topic itself, however is, and the websites I am finding in my punitive research is even more exciting. Truly.

After hours and days and weeks of stress related to lack of ideas and poor communication on behalf of our fine tutor, I have finally come up with a package design idea that is satisfying the requirements and is profound enough (or something) to be acceptable. Now I have to research and research and research and pull off some clever theoretical engineering. Clues to what I’m getting up to might run along the lines of me needing to visit the Colgate website.

Web is presented by two slightly hilarious and highly decent communicators, I have to haul together some kind of plan in the form of a workbook to show what kind of website I’m making for myself, then make it. This should be relatively easy and fun. Gosh it helps to know CSS. It freaked me out the other day when they started taking us through table based layout. OLD SCHOOL. EXACTLY WHAT I WANT TO UNLEARN. Turns out next week we’re doing the ‘real deal’.

The amusing thing about table based layout is that in my early web-design experiments when I was about 12, I actually worked out the theory of it myself. I seriously wondered why the world wasn’t setting things up with ‘invisible’ tables and thought I was the only one out there doing so… later I worked out they already were. I was an intuitive genius.

Typography for Publication (see earlier layout duplication) turns out that we get an extra week for something I thought was due earlier. After, we launch into a fairly free form: design a 6 page/3-double spread publication with words and images of our own choice. Words taken from an article, images supplied by self, not by stock. Total freedom in assignments is good but also too lenient to allow for perpetual comfort.

image from the book The Phantom Tollbooth, which you should read because it’s fun. I haven’t read it in years.

Design Life Uni

Burkie asked “Any chance of getting a peak at your assignment?”

NB. This is not my original layout, this is a duplication of an existing layout from a Notebook Magazine, this is me spending lots of time with a ruler both in hand and on the computer. Aside from the headings, there is placeholder text where actual text should be and due to my lack of cash, I did not buy the fonts they used and so have used ‘similar’ ones in substitution.

Click to enlarge >>

smalllayout.jpg

Oh, and I did a little ad for something related to my work the other day.

Design General Uni Work

Today I will do homework during my lecture… clever girl. Ho-diddley-um.

I am still strapped for ideas, I have two now – neither which really float my boat but there you go. I have found some sweet materials websites/resources so at least if I have a half baked idea, I can make my research look pretty. Thank you for your ideas. Love the lollipops Jess – however I vaguely recall them saying something about it not being a small thing ‘like a lollipop’ (Crikey they used the actual item!) that has minimal consequence to society. Suffer ye little children.

As I have been asking everyone and anyone for ideas, I naturally posed the question at the dinner table, my mother came out with some strange story about bears rubbing their bums on trees to get bark to stuff up their bum’s to stop ants getting in while hibernating.

I’m still not quite sure….

On a more cheery note, we taught my family (Well, Mum, Dad and Em) Munchkin last night and managed to force Dad to lose 5 levels, let Em almost win, and Mum triumph.

This is very clever strategy on our part, it means that Emily enjoyed herself, Mum will play again because she won (and found the cards so amusing) and Dad will play to get revenge. Scary thing is, I predicted Dad’s response word for word about five minutes before he said it himself. Do note, that this would be my response so the same situation.

Design Humor Life Uni

sferragoup_2.jpg

I don’t think in 3D and I’m ever so quickly starting to panic about the severe drought of ideas when it comes to my packaging design class. Sure give me colours and logos to make something pre-existing look pretty, but to be innovative enough to create some kind of new, environmentally, economically and socially sustainable package… I’m not so sure.

My problem primarily comes with identifying a bad packaging solution that encases a pre-existing product. Oh look, I’m sure are lots out there… but they are currently being elusive.

And I’m not studying chemistry so can’t create some new-wonder material.

Throw some ideas my way please… Packaging that annoys you in every-day life?

Oh yeah… and there’s the competition we enter our assignments in. I don’t care about winning much, but I wouldn’t mind developing an idea that I at least feel good enough about entering. If you don’t have ideas, you could pray for me. And I’m only half kidding.

Culture Design Uni

charles_calixto_book_front.gifI am meant to own the book, but I’m currently leaning on the website. It’s a good little thing. Saved my bum for some straight forward definitions. If you can find me the book online for less than $38 all up, I’d be grateful if you’d let me know.

Today has been filled with the painstaking task of drawing grids on tracing paper over A3 pages, labeling EVERYTHING and then going online to identify all the typefaces present. Oh Joy. Then I found Identifont. Needless to say, it helped enormously. There are too many millions of fonts/typefaces out there and when you’re looking for minor differences between 100’s of sans-serif options it gets painful.

I’m not doing this for fun specifically… I’m doing it for my class: Typography for Publication.

I never used to understand grids. I still half think they are stupid because people consistently break the boundaries and then simply give it a new name like a ‘muli-layered grid’. Why not stick to your margins or don’t call it a grid at all? However, I am slowly developing some kind of appreciation.

Despite the annoyance of filling my day, I half didn’t mind the hands on, focused aspect of it all. It keeps my brain flexible. I could happily spend (most of) my life online or in my head – sometimes they are one and the same.

Have another typography resource.

image source

Design Uni