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Dundee / Ayr, United Kingdom
Graphic Design, Photography, Design, Freelance. 3rd Year Graphic Design, Duncan of Jordanstone College Of Art and Design

Friday 4 December 2009

Buy Your Own

So apparently David Beckham loves Sharpie pens and is intent on stealing them. I looked this video as a part of our design studies task. As I was looking at the use of celebrities in advertising I thought that it would be appropriate to show one of the more scandalous random celebrity placements.

In my opinion David Beckham should just buy his own pens.

Wednesday 2 December 2009

Assignment 4C

On completion of Assignment 4A & 4B we were subsequently asked to think about what our next steps would be to further our research. When thinking about celebrity endorsements I believe that it would very interesting to carry out some of my own primary research into the subject. As much as I think the journals were accurate, I still think that talking to individual people may bring up a broader, more interesting range of responses rather than simply looking at statistics. I believe that the public’s opinion will differ from person to person, rather than simply being split down the middle.

In terms of celebrity endorsements I believe that certain people will be more affected than others. I used the example of David Beckham’s Sharpie adverts before as I believe that even though it seemed that they were simply feeding off his popularity; they did manage to raise their own profile dramatically, I for one didn’t know about them before hand but I do own a set of pens now. I didn’t feel like this was directly because of this but subconsciously it must have had some impact.

I would like to carry out a survey to find out, in advertising, what the general public’s persuasion was towards more: celebrities or created spokes persons. I would like to ask members of the public chosen completely at random a set of quick answer questions.

Questions that could be asked:
• Name the first advert that comes into your mind?
• Does this involve a celebrity or spokesperson Y/N?
• Why is this advert memorable?
• (Remind them of an example of an advert with a celebrity) What are they selling?
• (Name a product) What celebrity endorses this?
• What type of adverts to they like?
• What type of adverts do they not like?
• Do you feel affected by advertising?
• Do you enjoy looking at advertising Y/N?
• Why (if Y/N)?
• Who’s your favorite celebrity? Do they endorse any products? Do you buy them because of this celebrity?

I believe that after conducting this survey I will have a better, or more personal view of how celebrities affect advertising.

Tuesday 1 December 2009

Assignment 4

With advertising being such an influential part of modern life have you ever stopped and wondered why there’s a footballer promoting felt-tip pens, a film star telling you about credit cards or an ex-boxer selling you a portable grill? Celebrity endorsements have become the norm since they first appeared in 1863 when figures such as Queen Victoria and Pope Leo XIII gave their name to Vin Mariani European beverage, which later went on to be adapted into Pemberton's French Wine Coca or as its more widely known Coca Cola.

Therefore are endorsements by celebrities actually more effective than any other type of advertising? In order to investigate this more I have chosen to look at two journals to find out if this is in fact true.

Star Gazing” by Hamish Pringle

This article addresses the growing use of celebrities being used in advertising to endorse products. This journal came after research done into this area by Millward Brown showed that campaigns featuring a famous face are no more or no less successful than those featuring a made up character, product comparison or techniques such as humour. The journal’s objective was to show how the use of celebrities is common in advertising but does not guarantee success by any means.

Pringle analyzed a number of cases where celebrities have been used to promote products that are both relevant and irrelevant to themselves. Such examples that were given were David Beckham for Adidas football boots, however this was one of only few that were relevant to the celebrity. There was a wide berth of advertising that was in no way connected the celebrity to the product. For example Jennifer Aniston’s Barclaycard advert and Ray Liotta’s appearance for Heineken, they were used not because of their wide knowledge of the product or association with the product beforehand but because they had power as international stars to make the companies seem, like them, international and therefore able to branch into different markets.

The journal looks at how a celebrity with a positive reputation can be mirrored onto an unrelated product simply because their the one endorsing it. There is also the case that if a celebrity’s image changes then so does the products either for better or for worse. There is a good example from 2004 where Wayne Rooney is shown driving a Ford Ka Sport, this car although usually aimed towards women did very well amongst men due to his good performance in the European Cup.

The author mainly looks at campaigns featuring celebrities rather than those using created characters however skims over the most successful ones that have created celebrities from them, such as Halifax’s Howard Brown and the 118 118 men who have became instantly recognisable. There could possibly be more insight into these areas as the abstract leads us to believe that both types of advertising would be addressed.

The message that is being put across is that there are a number of factors that are important if a products to be successful. Using a personality won’t simply be enough if the consumer can’t relate to them. Sainsbury’s provides two extreme opposite cases of advertising. They display a point that Pringle tried to express that a bad script is generally the reason for failure not the celebrity. A campaign featuring John Cleese as Basil Faulty almost ruined Sainsbury’s as a large amount of customers couldn’t relate to the character as a person. They therefore didn’t feel connected to the brand as a result of a bad script rather than the celebrity. However Jamie Oliver’s adverts have risen their profile dramatically and won a Silver IPA Effectiveness Award for advertising as people can relate to a chef and food because there’s a connection there.

Many good points are expressed here as the author tries to address the subject from all angles. If this topic wasn’t looked at from so many views it could perhaps seem like he was sliding towards the view that celebrities aren’t needed or either that it is mainly their influence that sells the product, nevertheless he has managed to stay relatively unbiased even if it did seem like he set out against the use of celebrities in the beginning.

“Celebrity Endorsements Verses Crated Spokespersons In Advertising: A Survey Among Students” by DLR van der Waldt, M van Loggerenberng & L Wehmyer

This journal looks at depth into the use of celebrity endorsements against created spokespersons in advertising and reports on the benefits and downfalls of each. Later in the article a survey documents which of the two is a more effective way of advertising.

The article begins by stating that “some authors still doubt that endorsements are effective”. This seems to be a common theme as there is very little that can prove that endorsements are actually any more effective than created spokespersons. Nevertheless both have their good and bad points. This piece of writing gives a completely unbiased account of both sides as it tries to get to the roots of why either method should be preferred, the authors cite over 30 reports taken worldwide between 1990-2008 in an attempt to differentiate between the two.

It is stated that the use of endorsements can provide a number of benefits to advertising, for example: celebrities are seen to give credibility as they are viewed as experts on the product, thus making customers feel more safe or they can project their image onto the product. Evidence has shown that specified target markets generally have positive feelings towards celebrities. They avoid the need to tell a story as the right celebrity can establish a new product on the market or reinvent another. There are of course disadvantages to endorsements as private actions can negatively affect an organisation and should a celebrity choose not to endorse a product any more or state that they would never use this product again then the company could suffer.

In terms of using a created spokesperson although it has as many problems like celebrities, there aren’t the same type of risks. The authors outline a number of problems such as: a created spokesperson doesn’t have the same initial pulling power of a celeb and they won’t create the same short term lasting memory, although they do have a number of positives. A created spokesperson can be used if the right type of person cannot be found and can be created as a symbol in the mould of the company. They are less expensive, have longevity that can’t be promised with celebrities and can adapt to changing circumstances.

A study is taken in the article using a wide range of people of different ethnicities, gender and age, they were shown a mixture of adverts involving local as well as worldwide celebrities and created spokespersons. The goal was to see which they would score higher as experts on the product, who was most trustworthy and what looked more attractive. The survey proved to be in keeping with previous results in this area, with their views on expertise and trustworthiness being equal and the celebrities being marginally more attractive. This would seem to show that there is a not a great deal of difference in the two.

When looking back and comparing the two journals, the second seems to have a much deeper insight into both sides of the argument with the first just mainly looking at celebrities in endorsements. Although I originally set out to just look at celebrities in endorsements, I found that the comparison between them and created spokespersons gave a lot more detail into why celebrities are used. It seems that a celebrity gives a company an easy way into the market by hiring a famous face that will instantly catch the eye of consumers and create a buzz. However the money that is spent on this surely could be saved by using a created character that could arguably do more for a brand in the long run than any celebrity could do, as they can be sculpted in any way to reflect the brands image.

The thing that initially attracted me to celebrities being used in advertising was David Beckham’s peculiar Sharpie advert and the logic behind companies using stars to promote products unrelated to them. These types of adverts have been shown to neither be a format for success or failure but continue nonetheless to be one of the main forms of advertising. Journal 1 was in many ways a lot more helpful in understanding the how unrelated products and celebs can be a success, if the person can connect with the audience in the right way, like Wayne Rooney’s Ka advert for example, then there is a link. Journal 2 however seemed to be more about the theoretical side, without giving examples of the thing it was talking about, which was at times off putting. Despite this it did prove to be the only article that could put any weight in favour of celebrity endorsements even if only slightly.

From looking at other sources such as Alissa Quart’s “Branded” it can be seen that the use of celebrities roles in advertising and modern culture are a worryingly important if not overbearing part of teenagers lifestyles. People look for guidance and feel they need to be told what looks good or what’s in this season. It brings up questions such as are having celebrity advertisements everywhere pressuring people from all age groups to act or conform a certain way. In journal 2 it raises a point that endorsers should explain why they choose to represent the products they do. Would this change people’s opinions or would the celebrities question their motives for doing so?


Bibliography

Pringle, H (2004), 'Star Gazing', Creative Review, vol. 24, pt. 8, pp. 58-60, Aug. 2004, 0262-1037

Quart, A (2003), 'Branded: The Buying and Selling of Teenagers, Perseus Books 2002', 0738206644

van der Waldt, DLR, van Loggerenberng, Wehmyer, M&L (2009), 'Celebrity Endorsements Versus Created Spokespersons in Advertising: A Survey Among Students', South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences 12 (1): 100-114 Mar 2009,1015-8812

Monday 30 November 2009

Sorry Blog


I'm sorry blog, its been a while since my last post. Mainly since in the last few weeks works started to really pile up. We concluded our film project last week. This consisted of our final A2 poster and completed mailer invitation. I found this project quite enjoyable as well as trying. We were having to work in groups of two, I found that me and my partner Conner worked together quite well and were very honest with each other if things weren't going right. I had never worked on a project as part of a team but I think that I would be very capable of doing so now as a result of this project.

Another one of our projects that we have just finalized is is our one on packaging. For the final output we had to complete our packaging and 2D artwork and then resent it in a dragons den type format in front of a panel of experts. I found that experience although nerve racking, quite enjoyable as I don't think that I'm particularly fazed by public speaking any more. I got some quite positive feed back and some criticisms that I think I can take and use to make my product better.

For the end of our design studies module for this semester we have to compile an essay using a book and a journal on our chosen topic, which sort of ties all that we have been doing together. This has required a lot of research and time, however it has been interesting looking into my topic of celebrities in endorsements.
*This will be posted on Friday 4th*

Our last on going project is our website. Which I must say I have enjoyed roughly about the same amount as i've hate. At first I found using Dreamweaver really difficult as I had never had any experience in using it although after a few weeks of toiling something seemed to just click and it became a lot easier to use. After this it became quite enjoyable making your own website and is definitely something i'd like to do more of.

So I'm sorry I have neglected you blog but I will treat you better in the future.

Friday 20 November 2009

Over Design?


The other day whilst perusing around the shelves in Waterstones I came across something that I regrettably see as becoming a new fad. Where there once was my favorite graphic-novel section, a shelf full of assorted books which i would happily skim through for lengths at a time, there was now a large blank space and a perspex box in place of a shelf.

Before you panic (because I'm sure thats what your doing), the graphic-novels had just been relocated. However what may be worse was that in there place in this clear plastic box was two shiny oversized calculator looking objects, which still needed a sign with a description underneath them that read: EBOOKS.

Ebooks? Whatever could that be? Quite self explanatory to be honest, there large screened like an oversized phone that digitally hold books and display them page by page like a...book. Im pretty sure that there not new inventions as I feel I can remember talk of their release some time ago although now that they were here the idea of them sort of worried me as the thought that this could well be the future of reading. That somewhere in 30 years from now entire librarys could be held in the palm of your hand and rather than just having a walk round and having a look for something that will grab your attention, you will have to perform some sort of cross search and know exactly what your looking for.

I am sure that some people will think the exact opposite from me and think what a wonderful invention, having all these books at your disposal in the palm of your hand. But its nice to get a good book and read it and tear it too bits, then pick it up years later and reed it again and remember it from before. I myself like to go into a library without knowing what I'm looking for, I wouldn't want to lose this and have it replaced by having to do a cross-search every time I wanted to read something. Plus you lose books all the time and you have precious books that mean something to you, a cold piece of metal isn't something you can enjoy in the same way.

What happens if an eBook breaks? Are all your libraries gone. I feel that this is a step where design is sometimes blind. Just because we have the technology to do something doesn't mean we should. Everything doesn't have to be simplified to an iPod stage and if it were there would be no simple joys any more. No small problems like having to fold the cover on a paper back book over when your lying down to read it, which although is annoying is bearable. There are some things that are just good being kept the way they are.

Monday 16 November 2009

Top Websites


As a further part of Assignment 3, we were asked to compile a Top 5 list of websites that would be useful for keeping up to date with Graphic Design and a list of 5 websites for keeping up with current affairs.

For this there was an Inute tutorial to follow on how to use internet search engines properly http://tinyurl.com/dhtplibrary, it was (sort of) helpful in a way.

Regarde

Top 5 Graphic Design related websites

Sunday 15 November 2009

Bibliography

For Assignment 3 we were asked to further our research from Assignment 2 by looking into one particular aspect. For this, I chose to look at the role of celebrities in advertising. After choosing one particular area we were to compile an annotated bibliography using the resources available to us in the library and Cross Search. I found this task quite difficult to begin with as I didn't really find much in the library and when resorting to using Cross Search I was quite unsure of what to do for a while as it takes some getting used to in my opinion. However after using it for a while it became much more simple.

Below I have compiled my list of journals in the form of a bibliography in the style of the Harvard referencing system, enjoy...

Carson, P, (2000), 'Sporting Heroes', Creative Review, vol. 20, no. 3, pp. 31-33, Mar 2000, 0262-1037

This report follows the launch of a new Adidas campaign focusing on four major sports stars, Anna Kournikova, Jona Lomu, David Beckham and Ato Boldon. The purpose of the campaign was to put out the message that Adidas 'Makes You Better'.

Pringle, H (2004), 'Star Gazing', Creative Review, vol. 24, pt. 8, pp. 58-60, Aug. 2004, 0262-1037

Star Gazing looks at the use of celebrities in advertising and illustrates the fact that campaigns using them are no more successful that one using a created character as of a result of poor script. The study also looks at some of the more successful advertisements including the likes of George Forman's for Saltons Grilling Machine and Wayne Rooney in an advert for Ford.

Quart, A (2003), 'Branded: The Buying and Selling of Teenagers, Perseus Books 2002', 0738206644

This journal deals with the relationships between teenagers and consumer products. It analyses the ways that companies aim products towards certain age groups and in what ways teenagers are drawn toward these branded products. It also looks at consumer behaviours and preferences.

Sheilds, R (2009), '"Too violent" Knightley advert banned from TV', Independent on Sunday, pp. 28, 26 Apr 2009, 0958-1723

This Journal/Newspaper article reports on the anti domestic abuse advert entitled "The Cut" starring Keira Knightley, which was banned from television by Clearcast on grounds that it is too violent after receiving complaints. Womens activists, politicians and the group that made the film are outraged by the decision after two people complained.

Tripp, C, (1994), 'The Effects of Multiple Product Endorsements By Celebrities on Consumers' Attitudes and Intentions', Journal of Consumer Research 20 4 535-47, 00935301

In this journal article the author carries out two studies relating to the likeability of celebrities involved in multiple product endorsement. the studies look at how the growing number of multiple endorsements by celebrities and how they can change their credibility and likeability of the product. A series on interviews are undertaken too look at this.

van der Waldt, DLR, (2009), 'Celebrity Endorsments Versus Created Spokespersons in Advertising: A Survey Among Students', South African Journal of Economic and Management Sciences 12 (1): 100-114 Mar 2009,1015-8812

This study looks into the use of celebrities in advertising and the whether they can actually be beneficial as an endorser to a product. Marketers are faced with the problem that there is little to no scientific evidence to prove that these well known faces can cad to the trustworthiness of the product. The study looks at the cost effectiveness of a celebrity endorser and such instances as bad publicity for the celebrity reflecting on the product.

Waller, D, (2009) 'Stars On Board', BRW 10/8/2009, Vol. 31 Issue 40, p44-44, 0727-758X

The author looks here at the role some celebrities take on the board of certain companies and how their involvement can boot the companies image. He also offers his insight and a sceptical view on how much of a role they actually have.

Wednesday 11 November 2009

Twittered or Tweeted


You may remember a similar post I made not too long ago regarding opening a new flickr account. Well this months social network set to baffle me is Twitter.

I've put off getting Twitter for months as it gained popularity as I think I expected it to fade away as another unnecessary social networking site. However its continued to grow through out the past year so I assumed now was as good a time as ever to broaden my area of contact. I made my account the other day and I think that perhaps I was right in my stance against Twitter. It seems to be a bit vain in my opinion to constantly want people to know what your doing at all times. Who really wants to know if you've just eat a particularly good orange?

This may still be my opinion as I haven't quite found my feet yet. It all seems to be a bit alien to me still, one of the things that confused me was the language used. Apparently women tweet and men twitter. I do see its use in a business sense but don't really see what it offers that a blog doesn't.

As much as I'm cynical about it, I really do want to be proven wrong and see it in the same way that millions of others do as many people have said its a really useful tool to have at your disposal.

Twitter. Prove me wrong.
http://twitter.com/ste69en

Monday 2 November 2009

Brainstorming



Firstly apologies for the giant images.

This entry may be a tad belated as we did do the brainstorming exercise a few weeks ago. However i feel it is more appropriate to write about it now as i have completed the full exe
rcise.

The first step of this short project was to, as a group, discuss or "brainstorm" our chosen chapters in a small group and how they related to design. The idea was to write down al
l ideas without discarding any no matter how relevant. Now in all honesty I didn't quite see where this exercise was going and was perhaps a bit sceptical in my approach. But after we got the ball rolling i found that ideas started to come and the process began to flow. We had 3 different sessions, one for each topic that people in the gr
oup had chosen. After the sessions we were told to spend time thinkin
g and just discussing how certain things relate to design. And I was quite surprised that we didn't ever have to consciously do this as I found that while on a break or in the studio
conversation would at times turn this way naturally.

Afterwards we were to create an A2 poster to take into the next semin
ar. This was to be on your topic from before. I chose to hone in on the salesmen aspect of the Law of the Few. I found that there was so many aspects of life in which we are being sold things and at times it can be unconscious, these are the signs of a good salesman, one who can sell you
things without you even realizing. One good example of this that i noticed was that each day when I walk to Uni in the morning, i walk past a billboa
rd for McDonalds with a 20 foot high packet of chips on it. I didn't really realize this till after a few days when i found that by the time i arrived at Uni I had an extreme craving for chips.

Other aspects that I looked at were celebrity endorsements. One be
ing David Beckham and the Sharpie adverts. Now these are two comple
tely unrelated brands that have somehow managed to make a connection that have made the sales of these felt-tip pens sky rocket. In marketing if you have the right image to accompany any product then it will sell no matter how simple a product.

I now own a set of Sharpie pens...

Thursday 29 October 2009

Font Yukle


I found this handy website today that offers thousands of good quality free fonts, definitely worth a look. Enjoy.

Wednesday 28 October 2009

Objectified


On Tuesday night I went along to to the DCA's screening of Objectified. Billed as Helvetica the sequel, Objectified is the follow up film by Gary Hustwit in his design trilogy.

I must say that I enjoyed this documentary and appreciated the way it looked at how designers design the seemingly unimportant things that we may dismiss as design. Their example being at one point garden shearers. I myself would have simply dismissed these objects as the subject of design through the idea that they arent glamourous or impressive to look at in any way but are simply a functionaly device for a seemingly unimportant task. But then again who else would create these things if it wasn't a designer. I probably had the same mind set as a lot of people in thinking that certain things were just made and did not consider design at all. However when you look around every single thing that you see has been designed in one way or another, may it have the complexity of a laptop or the simpleness of a tooth pick, likewise at one point someone has had to have made a decision on the aesthetics, ergonomics etc. and not just simply start producing.

We as designers have such a huge responsibility these days to produce objects that do not simply serve their purpose but have multiple functions, shelf lives, safe environmental properties, all that have such a large baring on the success of the product. Designers of the past perhaps didn't have these worries but this is the future of design now and is something that isn't going to change. One of the points that was brought up in Objectified that particularly struck a chord with me was made by Karim Rashid, he was talking about the life of products and that if their only intended to last for, say, 11 months then why are they built to last forever. This got me thinking surely there must be a way to make either design last or make it degradable. The latter seems to be the more plausible as people are simply too interested in new things. Everyone wants the newest laptop or phone or iPod whereas we could easily still be using the same one from 3 years ago perfectly well. The wants of the people are not going to change so it is us that will have to instigate a change perhaps starting small and working our way up.

The film raises a great number of discussion points and to me goes a lot deeper than the previous film on Helvetica. The discussion on multifunctional design, I thought was the most interesting and thought provoking area of the film and is definitely something that I feel in the near future will definitely be the main factor in not only my work in design but all designers work.

Wednesday 21 October 2009

Colour Blind and Design

In the first lecture of this semester with Jonathan Baldwin he posed the question of was any body in the group colour blind and I was surprised to find that I was the only one who raised their hand. Unless some people just didn't raise their hand this means that I am the only person in second year design that is colour blind. 5-8% of males have some form of colour blindness which means that out of a lecture of perhaps 200 people there should be at least around 10 people including me.

After that lecture it got me thinking about being colour blind and how much it actually affected me as a designer or and artist, and it made me wander if people who were colour blind would avoid going into a discipline that relied so heavily on colour.

At that point I was currently awaiting a response from the disability services after sending them an enquiry as I was having some difficulty working on the Macs in the computer suits. I went in for a meeting with an adviser later and was quite shocked at her lack of knowledge and somewhat patronising approach to the subject. I didn't feel that she understood colour blindness (although stating her husband was so she knew all about it) and also why it could pose such a difficulty in a design based subject. This lead me to think that if she didn't really understand it then most other people wouldn't either so I tried my best to think of way to describe it so that people would understand.

So I'l try my best to describe it in a way that everyone will understand. Basically the term Colour Blind is a bad term for it, we aren't blind in any way, we can see in the exactly same way as you do. However it is all about perception and how or what you perceive a colour to be. I read a good story by a colour blind Canadian man that best descrtibes it...
One day this man went out and bought 4 blue mugs, and for years he had his favourite blue mug. He didn't have a reason but 1 of the 4 was his favourite, and one day he couldn't find it so he asked his wife where his favourite blue mug was. Blue mug.....she said? Your favourite Green mug is in the bedroom. He was unaware that years ago he went out and bought 3 blue and 1 green mug and as they were all together he assumed they were all blue. Although as soon as his wife told him that one was blue and one was green he could see a clear difference.....This in my case is what colour blindness is to me, all that's needed is a little help. It's not what colours this pen? Blue. Aww well you can't be colour blind cos if you were then you would think it was yellow.

Some good did come out of my meeting with the disability officer however as she sent for a man from the ICS department to come see me about software that could help. He was a very nice man probably in his late 50s and he took a keen interest about finding out about Graphic Design. I was also pleased to find out that he was also colour blind and in his younger years had wanted to peruse a career in art and design. The sad part was that he felt that because he was colour blind he wouldn't be able to do something like that. This brought me back round to the thought that other people were still thinking this way when it is quite easy to get round these obstacles now. I personally don't feel at a disadvantage and don't think that I should either as to be honest it's quite nice to be different some times even if its just through my eyes.

George gave me a few websites to look at to help. There are a few that are particularly useful and should be looked at not just by colour blind people but by others too as they are useful to help them understand. Enjoy.

http://www.colblindor.com/ - this ones very useful


http://www.colorschemer.com/download.php - theres a download called colorpix which is quite good.


Wednesday 14 October 2009

Jamster


Like me I'm sure many of you have been irritated greatly over the past few years by the painfully annoying revelation that has been television ring tone adverts by the likes of Jamster. However I don't see how these companies can continue to operate with the amount of relentless advertising that they do as god knows who buys their products? With tariffs like "join now for only £4.50 per week" for this luxury screen saver, I don't imagine many people see that and think what a great investment.

Jamster did have great success a few years ago with the crazy frog phenomenon that some how managed to spawned not 1, not 2 but 3 albums! But I just don't see where a constant string of customers is still coming from since then that would lead them to believe that selling ring tones, wallpapers etc. will still make money. Young children is the likely target market although I doubt any parent in their right mind would fund anything this ridiculously obscene. Or maybe there is a group of 40 somethings that huddle around the water cooler and compare Love-O-Meters and Speed Gage wallpapers.

I imagine that their repetitive pointless adverts would put off potential customers rather than endear them to the company but who knows.

That's just my completely unbiased opinion...

Monday 12 October 2009

Polystyrene + Gherkin = ?


So another brief arrived on my desk today, this time we're to combine the research we did on our material (polystyrene) and food (gherkin) to make a futuristic product and packaging for it...

Think i might need to work on my ideas a bit.

So far I've got a polystyrene gherkin...

The Tipping Point

So, mind mapping. What does it really mean? Words in bubbles pointing to other little bubbles, which in turn take you to other little bubbles until the page is filled with untraceable scribblings of (you guessed it) little bubbles.

No. Not quite. I always assumed that mind maps and spider diagrams were the same thing, and to be honest I didn't like them. They don't work for me and never have done, so when I found out we had to complete a task using mind maps I was just thrilled as you can imagine.

However, I was pleasantly surprised. We were asked to map out The Tipping Point by Malcolm Gladwell, using the method taught by Tony Buzan in The Mind Map Book. We were to give a brief description of each chapter and then to go into greater detail on a specific chapter.

When doing the overview in Buzan's style I found that it was in fact a simple way to remember facts. The method is to use different colours for each different branch, in this case this was each chapter, and also use varied text or sketches to help you if you want. The mind map method is very free and flowing and unregimented unlike standard bullet pointed note taking. Using this method you can quickly and easily find and jump to the piece of information needed.
For the next part of the task we had to map out an individual chapter, mine being The Law of the Few: Connectors, Mavens and Salesmen. I felt this particular chapter was interesting and had a wide depth of information which explained a lot about the spread of epidemics and how they are down to a select number of people.

Although I was pretty sceptical at the start about the whole process of mind mapping, I do however now see the benefits of this process and hopefully will be able to put them into practice again. There was one down point however. Using different pens for me means making lots of mistakes and poorly trying to hide them, so if you look close enough you will realise that I am a boy badly in need of tipex.

Tuesday 6 October 2009

Flickr


So I thought that I would get all into designer mode and start connecting with the world a bit more. My first step was to join the shiny world of flickr and start sharing and my brilliant pictures with everyone, so made the account. Then realised that I don't actually have any.

Next stop the camera shop.

Gherkin?


So.... gherkins. Is there anything nice you can say about them?

Probably not. But once again I have felt the wrath of the lucky dip. For this brief I have to research and compile a sketchbook to do with these scrumptious little ugly things, that nobody that I have met so far likes. Except from my girlfriend.....of course.

Much like the last brief that we were set, which was on materials, which
I drew polystyrene (oh yes the gherkin of the material world) I was grasping at straws for information. That was until the Gherkin building came to mind. Designed by Lord Foster, I've never really appreciated what an amazing building it actually is. Admittedly architecture seems to pass me by at times but after looking into Foster+Partners and at their website www.fosterandpartners.com I began to appreciate how wide their area of design is.

So I managed to find something good to say about gherkins, just don't try and make me eat one!

Sunday 27 September 2009

Noma Bar



While at the DCA I picked up a really interesting book - "Negative Space" by Noma Bar. You may recognise some of his work in the Guardian, Esquire, The Economist and many more.

He uses negative space to give pictures double meanings. Its quite interesting and also not too expensive including the DCA's student discount.


Take A Trip To The DCA


Take a look at Thomas Hirschhorn's new exhibition at the DCA, the interestingly entitled "It's Burning Everywhere".

Hirschhorn makes the majority of his exhibitions out of everyday materials such as cardboard like as in this work and deals with cultural and political points of view.

It contains quite a lot of graphic scenes of civilian war victims so perhaps not for the squeamish.

Very interesting however and definitely worth a look if your passing by.

Tuesday 22 September 2009

Introduction

Well as I'm new to this I thought that i would open with a joke, enjoy...

7 dwarfs in a shower
There were 7 dwarfs in a shower all feeling happy, but then happy got out so they started feeling grumpy instead!

There we go that gets me off the mark
Well I should probably introduce myself, I'm Stephen McKay, I'm 19 and I study Graphic Design