Tuesday, 10 February 2015

Portfolio

























Film edits - 27 B&W shots based around the theme of surrealism for a poster project. Idea and development below. To the right. an A3 first idea from the orginal B&W shots edited in photo to give a surreal effect.

























Idea sheet 1.
Idea Sheet 2




Type Experiment sheet - Created in Photoshop.
































Another 23 shots this time digital and 6 developments all in Photoshop. A3 size.



Poster Ideas, Development and A3 Final Piece.

Photograms, after visiting the Andy Warhol exhibition in Liverpool I wanted to draw my hand at working with film again. As such created these 3 A5 photograms, which I then scanned and edited in photoshop to get a 60's vibe.




Illustrator shoes based on Sarah Beetson's work. All done at A3 sizes with a dpi of 600.



  


Typography Experimentation. Looking at different type forms from a digital and a hand render stand point. Digital done in Illustrator with a theme of ridged on A3 sizing. While the hand rendered was done while looking closely at letterform and how each letter interacts with others of different type. Both at A3 size again.



Fashion Illustration. Starting out with basic sketches in my sketchbook moving over to a mixed media piece on paper and pc. The paper being a pen and paper collage with elements of print work to create the skirt pattern which was then cut up. While the same pattern was also scanned into the computer and photoshopped to create a 3 piece suit for the male. Gradients added for shadow effects.


Mixed media A2 drawing of fashion garment. Started out as a charcoal sketch which I then worked into with newspapers, wax, white emulsion and then read defined lines with charcoal again. bring the piece back to life. 



Graphics: Illustrator shoes.

Carrying on with my elements of design brief and still working in Illustrator my next task was to research Sarah Beetsons work and bring in an object to draw in Illustrator. Since I was looking into Sarah Beetsons work it only seemed right to take her work with shoes and draw my own shoe.
What I enjoyed most about her work is the very clear clean lines with a nice 60's feel as of the bright use of vibrant colours.


So before even looking into Illustrator I took a photo of my subject so I had a static image I could look at and draw from since I wanted the image to have a 2D feel to it since I planned to use just lines to make up the basic shape.


Taking the photograph into Illustrator I used it as a template to create my basic shape for the shoe as seen above. I did this by drawing sections at a time on different layers using the pen tool as the node feature allows for easy shaping and corrections to the base drawing. After I had the basic shape down after alot of small fixes to make sure certain sections didn't over lap (which would be more noticeable when colours added) My next step was to add stitch lines and air holes to the main shoe and use the same technique of adding line spacing to my base line from the pen tool to give off the grip texture on the front of the shoe. I feel this really brings the shoe to live. The extra detail such as that and the shoe lacing eyes really make this piece jump out I feel.

 The next step was to add colours to each shape. Doing this allowed me to focus on any missed imperfections I may have over looked in the original line work. 
With a focus on colour and clean design I ended up making a sleek red and blue/purple shoe after such went for a more unique colour scheme looking back at Sarah Beetsons work again for guidance. After finalising the 4 pieces I added some tonal colour as backgrounds to help the final pieces pop off the page. I feel this worked really well with what I was aiming for.