Continuity in Design

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Posted by admin | Posted in Graphic Design, Magazines & Articles | Posted on 09-10-2008

Following up an earlier article where we discussed some magazine layout principles, let’s take a look at continuity in design.

 

Design continuity for a specialized marketing piece, specifically one that only makes an appearance quarterly or annually is incredibly important. Because the piece will only be in the viewers hand a few times a year, it’s important to make a visual impact that the reader can easily remember.

 

How is this accomplished? When creating such a piece, it’s important to keep some "theme" of consistency throughout the magazine. The theme will usually consist of similar graphic elements that appear on each spread, every page or at regular intervals within.

 

Here is a great example of how this is applied in a semi-annual magazine for the Alumni of the Communications Department at ORU. Knowing the advisor/designer personally I can clearly see her thought process as she carries the visual theme throughout the magazine.

Communique 1

Notice the "recording" lines around the dominant photo. These are repeated symbolically on the opposing page that begins the profile article. Later on, as we continue through the magazine, we again see the same elements repeat. The story is different and even the layout is different but the theme is the same.

Commique 2

To keep the magazine fresh and changing, we don’t want to simply repeat the exact same layout over and over. Between these main stories the magazine is filled with shorter articles, sidebars and photos. But once we come back to such a spread, there is an immediate visual connection to what we’ve already seen.

 

Ways this can be accomplished:


1. Repeat.
Simply pull a previously used element such as a drop cap, a rule line, background graphics, etc.

 

2. Duplicate a photo effect. Add crop marks, frames, distress or elegant filter effects to dominate photos to create a unified effect.

 


3. Mirror.
To mirror a spread simply re-arrange the elements in your layout to appear as if they would if you literally printed it out and held it up to a mirror. (If you can’t visualize the effect–print it out!) This is what has been done in the above example.

 

4. Reflect. What would your layout look like if reflected upside down? Please realize we’re not referring to the text or headline, but rather the arrangement of the elements on the page. If your dominant photo is a square on the bottom left, another layout within the piece could have it placed in the top left instead.

 


5. Rotate.
If your original design is solid, you can rotate your layout of elements in a clockwise or counter-clockwise fashion to retain the ‘feel’ of the other spreads.

 

Keeping these tricks in mind with assist you in creating a unified magazine piece.  To download the entire magazine to see the visual impact of repeating elements click here.

 

Create a Scanline Effect on Your Photos.

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Posted by admin | Posted in Magazines & Articles | Posted on 06-09-2008

I found this simple tutorial through an e-Newsletter that I subscribe to from StockExpert. Using half-tones in Photoshop is an excellent way to get incredible visual effects.

 

This tutorial will help you go from this:

Biker

 

To this:

Sample 2

 

Several effects added to a photo can take a normal photo and make it extraordinary. Click here to go to the tutorial.

Keyboard Shortcuts for Special Characters

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Posted by admin | Posted in Magazines & Articles, Resources | Posted on 27-08-2008

We all like shortcuts! Especially those that save us time on our jobs. Recently through an eNewsletter from Creative Techs, I recieved an awesome tip from Design Tools. They have released a 17 page PDF containing SHORTCUT keys for special characters. If you use InDesign or Quark you currently have to refer to the glyphs palette for most of your special characters.

 

With this handy PDF you can quickly learn and memorize the keyboard shortcuts to enter them directly.  Click here to get your copy!

Direct Mail Resource

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Posted by admin | Posted in Magazines & Articles | Posted on 01-06-2008

Believe it or not, the United States Postal Service actually offers a FREE annual publication for those who need information on current standards (mailing rates, gimmick prices, etc.) for sending direct mail pieces through the post. This resource usually comes out in March or April. I just got my copy.

 

In addition to this, the USPS also publishes a quarterly magazine Deliver which deals with marketing trends and other related direct mail issues. The magazine is available via web or PDF versions or you can sign up for their printed subscription list–but the best part is—-it’s FREE!

 

Happy reading!

 

 

Magazine Resources

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Posted by admin | Posted in Magazines & Articles | Posted on 25-05-2008

All my friends give me a hard time about being old-fashioned, but I still LOVE a good PRINTED magazine. I spend all my time on a computer so the last thing I want to do is have to READ my periodicals online!

 

Below is a collection of some of my favorite design magazines and links to their sites! Some actually are FREE to subscribe to, others have steep subscription prices but are worth every penny!