Sunday, September 28, 2008

Thursday, September 25, 2008

VL: Audience

Bakers/Pastry Chefs have relied on classic tools like this one to blend dough for their signature pastries. The pastry blender is equipped with curved wires that quickly incorporate cold pieces of butter into flour and other dry ingredients – the key to a light, flaky texture. Bakers/Pastry Chefs were introduce to this object in their attendance at culinary school. They are interested in the object because it is a utensil they use to make delicious pastries. When using this utensil they tend to reminisce about the time they spent in the kitchen baking with love ones, happy times. This utensil is a tool that has been around for a while and through time this simply, manual tool has not changed, today bakers/pastry chefs might want to see and exhibit of vintage kitchen utensils.

Monday, September 22, 2008

VL: FINAL CRIT

I have created two posters that communicate to a non-collegiate, workforce demographic. My formal approach to the poster consist of photography and photocopy too emulate the passing of time. Poster VOTE! rhetorical trope is a metaphor, relating that voting takes the same amount of time it takes to break for lunch. Poster !VOTE rhetorical trope is a hyperbole, exaggerating the time you will have wait for next vote.



Rhetoric project documentation !VOTE!

Thursday, September 18, 2008

SR /JR Critique

gaining new perspectives and engage in cross-studio interaction OMG.

After meeting with Genia and discussing my two poster I have come to the conclusion that I could incorporate more into them both, as well has Photoshop images and playing with colors. Other things to watch out for legible type.

Monday, September 15, 2008

Sunday, September 14, 2008

VL: MOVING IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION


These are final two direction for the poster TAKE A BREAK AND VOTE (parody) and 30 MINUTES OR 4 MORE YEARS (hyperbole). Here are a few final image making prints (photography, photocopy ,and moving projection).


Thursday, September 11, 2008

Tuesday, September 9, 2008

dS: Audits

logos


















brand application































products













tagline

NEWS 7 KATV & spirit of arkansas

FOX 4 Working for you

CNN.com breaking news and information on the latest top stories, weather, business, entertainment, politics, and more.


The Sunday Herald, Scotland
Marketing slogan: Sunday Herald. Seven Days. One paper.

Financial Times Newspaper
Advertising slogan: No FT, No Comment

The Independent newspaper
Advertising slogans: The quality compact.
It is. Are you?

New York Times Newspaper
Ad slogan: All the News That's Fit to Print

Daily Mirror, Britain's tabloid newspaper
Slogans: Daily Mirror. Be part of it
Forward with the People
Forward with Britain
Biggest daily sale on Earth

The Times of India, newspaper, Delhi
Advertising slogan: The joy of continuous celebration

Wall Street Journal
Slogan: The daily diary of the American dream

The Times newspaper, UK
Slogans: Join the debate.
Are you missing what's important?
Top people take the Times.
When The Times speaks, the World listens.
Have you ever wished you were better informed?

Sunday Times newspaper, Great Britain
Slogans: Sunday isn't Sunday without the Sunday Times
The Sunday Times is the Sunday papers

Ekstra Bladet tabloid newspaper, Denmark
Slogans: What would you do without Ekstra Bladet?
Put up with Ekstra Bladet or put up with anything

Cape Times newspaper
Tagline: There's nothing more valuable than knowledge

Helsingin Sanomat newspaper
Marketing slogan: Scandinavia's BIGGEST newspaper

The Mail On Sunday newspaper
Advertising slogan: A newspaper, not a snooze paper

Bild Newspaper, Germany
Ad slogan: Bild. Read the world's fastest newspaper

Chicago Tribune newspaper brand
Taglines: What's in it for you?
Chicago Tribune. Beyond words.

The Detroit News, Michigan, USA
Marketing slogan: We Know Where You Live

Herald newspaper, Everett, Washington, USA
Tagline: Herald. If It Matters To You, It Matters To Us

Evening Herald tabloid newspaper, Dublin, Ireland
Advertising slogan: Evening Herald. The Best Part of the Day

The Dominion Post, broadsheet newspaper
Motto: Making Twice the Noise (for New Zealand version)

Toronto Star, major Canadian newspaper
Advertising slogan: Toronto Star. It's where you live.

Sowetan, South Africa's daily newspaper
Slogans: Power your Future.
Sowetan. Building the Nation.

Daily Times newspaper, Lahore, Pakistan
Slogan: Your right to know. A new voice for a new Pakistan.

Indian Express newspaper
Motto: Indian Express. Journalism of courage.

Cape Argus, an afternoon newspaper, Cape Town, South Africa
Advertising slogan: Cape Argus. News you can use.

Nasha Canada newspaper (biweekly ethnic newspaper on Russian language)
Advertising slogan: The newspaper for those who can read.

Scotland On Sunday, broadsheet newspaper
Tagline: Scotland up close.

Courier News, Bridgewater, New Jersey, USA
Advertising slogan: Local News. First in the Morning.

The Scotsman newspaper
Advertising slogan: The Scotsman. It's thinking time.

Edinburgh Evening News newspaper
Marketing slogan: Evening News. Tomorrow's News Today.

The Australian, Australia's national daily newspaper
Tagline: Are you an informed Australian?

The Daily Telegraph, broadsheet newspaper, UK
Slogans: We've got the greatest writers.
Read a bestseller every day.
Daily Telegraph. Britain's Best Selling Daily Broadsheet.
Daily Telegraph. Share Trader Game.

Wairarapa Times-Age daily newspaper, Masterton, New Zealand
Advertising slogan: Your Region. Your Paper.

The Sun, a British tabloid newspaper
Tagline: The Sun. We love it!

Daily Express, a British tabloid newspaper
Slogan: The paper that stands for real values and gives you real value for money.

The Sunday Post, Scottish newspaper
Advertising slogan: The Sunday Post. It makes perfect sense.

Thisday, Nigeria's newspaper
Motto: Thisday. African views on global news.

Scottsbluff Star-Herald, Nebraska, USA
Ad slogan: The Star-Herald. Pride in the Panhandle.

Waikato Times, Waikato, New Zealand
Marketing slogan: As Waikato As It Gets.

The Guardian, a British daily newspaper
Tagline: The Guardian. Think...

The News of the World, Britain's newspaper
Advertising slogan: Big on Sundays.

History
The New York Times was founded on September 18, 1851, by journalist and politician Henry Jarvis Raymond and former banker George Jones as the New-York Daily Times. The paper changed its name to The New York Times in 1857. The paper was first published every week and half, as an evening paper, bearing the name, Los Angeles Daily Times on December4, 1881, but soon went bankrupt. The paper's printer, the Mirror Company, took over the newspaper and installed former Union Army Lieutenant Colonel Harrison Gray Otis as an editor. Otis made the paper a financial success. In 1884, he bought out
the newspaper and printing company to form the


Competition




























NY TIMES and LA TIMES are number 1&2 because o their sources and the ability to quality news, information and entertainment in the U.S. and around the world. We strive to leverage our brands across multiple media platforms, to the benefit of our readers, advertisers, employees and shareholders.

To accomplish this, we are executing on our strategy of:

  • developing innovative new products in print and online,
  • expanding our research and development capabilities,
  • rebalancing our portfolio and
  • implementing operational efficiency and cost reductions.
problems
Paper use to newspaper is not environmentally friendly. most digital reader devices are bulky in size. Cost is very expense for devices as well as subscription

strategy
incorporate all news media into one (newspaper, local news, world news, and live news)
produce a device that is tangible, digital, and environmentally friendly
requiring every household to wireless internet connect of there on.

Thursday, September 4, 2008

Slices for eNewsletter


I am having problems with slicing the angle text bodies.

MXP: E Newsletter



Add more detail and color to mimic a tween scrapbook/diary

Tuesday, September 2, 2008

MXP: E Newsletter


Based on my audience, preppy, christian tweens, I designed this some what regal newsletter that is just text and image of stories that sophisticated mature tween would like.


This eNewsletter is for the tween the same audience, this sketch has videos, because today tweens would more likely watch their news rather than reading it, at the bottom of the page there is a small paragraph for "readers".



This eNewsletter has a representation of preppy with the argyle/plaid and a sketchbook/craftbook look with post notes blocks,