Thursday, March 31, 2011

Poster Project





For this project, I chose to do a poster about the environmental issue of deforestation. More specifically, I chose to focus on deforestation as a product of wasting paper.  I also wanted to show the dichotomy of technology’s place in the issue, and I wanted to do it all very simply.  A lot of paper is wasted by printing emails needlessly.  At the same time, a lot of trees are saved by pragmatic individuals who do more of their paperwork digitally, without printing anything at all.  Even in this day and age of burgeoning environmental consciousness, there are still places, like my husband’s old office for example, where one can find more than one or two people who print literally everything,  needlessly in almost every case.   I would envision the poster I have designed being displayed around any business office or building.
I started with a bright green color on an 8.5 x 11 inch canvas.  Green inherently instills a sense of nature.  I used ‘select all’ then I modified my selection à  border, and made a border of 40 pixels, which I then filled with a darker green.
I used Google Images again to find appropriate subject matter.  Here are source-links for the pictures used:
I placed all of these on the green background using separate layers.  In fact, I just dragged and dropped them from Internet Explorer into the open document in Photoshop.   I used rotate and scale on some of them to get the layout of the pictures the way I liked them; not static.  I set up a layer fx style, applied to all of them, of a 10pt white stroke and a drop shadow of 145 degrees.
Next, I found some clipart of a tree, specifically just a tree outline (http://tinyurl.com/6f9rvlf).   I opened a second file, and dragged in the clipart-tree.  Then I scaled it large, then I found a generic memo that looked like it was printed out here: http://abovethelaw.com/2007/06/nationwide-pay-raise-watch-a-few-more-memos/; I placed it in a layer under the tree outline.  With the magic wand, I selected around the tree, then dropped down to the memo layer and hit delete. Now I had a ‘tree’ of a memo.  I then I found some crinkled paper in Google Images: http://www.deviantart.com/download/79779014/Crinkled_Paper_by_whippys.jpg; I put this on a layer above the memo, did the same thing to it to make a ‘tree’ of wrinkled paper, but used blending options to lower the opacity and make the memo-tree look like it’s made of wrinkled paper.  I then flattened the image, and brought the tree over to the main poster.  I used an fx of a 10 pt black stroke, and again the same angled drop shadow.
For the text, I used a font called “system”.  I wanted it to stand out against the green and invoke that sense of technology.  I opted for yellow, and since System doesn’t have a natural italic, I used ‘skew’ to italicize it.  Then I used a slightly bigger stroke- 13 pt black- and again the drop shadow, and was quite pleased with the outcome. 

          I think the message is simple, yet poignant.

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Photomontage Project



                For this photo manipulation piece, I decided to have fun with it and construct a scene of robots at a disco.  I am a huge fan of Eric Joyner (www.ericjoyner.com).  I love his oil paintings, and I’m crazy about retro robots.  Lately I have been really into drawing robots in my personal artwork, and wanted to start collecting them.  I did a Google image search for ‘toy robot’ and found a ton of retro robot pictures.  Many of them came from www.robotisland.com or www.retrotoys.com; a few others came from various sites just grabbed off of the Google image search.  I chose images of retro robots and toys that where just the figure on a white or mono-colored background, so I could easy remove the backgrounds in Photoshop. 

After I gathered a bunch of robot pictures, I realized some of them were facing slightly to the left and some slightly to the right.  Some were even positioned slightly less angled, and I realized I could put the robots in a semi-arc, as if they were all standing around watching something, but what?  Another robot tearin’ it up on the dance floor, of course!  The hardest thing to find was the right background.  Eventually I got the green disco lights by searching on flicker.com for “disco lights”.

I began with a 1600 x 1200 canvas in Photoshop.  I popped in the background of lights, and then used new layers for each of the various robot placements from other pictures.  I rotated or ‘flip[ped] horizontal’ some of the robots in order to get a more even crowd of onlookers.   For the robots in the middle: on one set I inverted the colors to have them appear different, then I copied one of the robots and used hue/saturation to change it to pink.  Stacking the robots via layers, I created an ‘FX’ style for the layers of a 5pt black Stroke, and an Outer Glow comprised of the light and dark greens of the background.  I chose to give them all an outline to make this look more uniform and give a realistic yet sketchy-feel.  Giving them a ‘diffuse’ Outer Glow allowed it to look like the green lights were reflecting off their various metal surfaces and pouring through the various gaps in the crowd.  After finding the main dancing robot in Google image search, I gave him a 7pt Stroke and a purple Outer Glow to bring focus to the foreground.   After all this, I thought it needed a floor, and after extensive searches for ‘disco floor’ I found the one I used, and tailored it to fit my image using Scale. The purple on the main dancing robot matches the purple/blue from the floor.  The final touch came when I added in a disco ball, to which I added a small lens flare using filters.  Below is the 800x600 version. Click on it to download the original, which is hosted on some personal webspace.