visual rhetoric, august 28th

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Page 1: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th
Page 2: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

TODAY

1) Icebreaker

2) The Syllabus-questions?

3) Oh, C.R.A.P.

4) Design Task Zero: You’re in the Movies now

5) Homework

Page 3: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

Icebreaker

For today I want you to tell us all your name and your favorite visual artist.

Page 4: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

The syllabus

For today, you should have read over the syllabus and major assignments. At this point, do you have any questions or concerns? Ask away! Don’t be shy!

Page 5: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

AND NOW SOME C.R.A.P.

Page 6: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

As funny as it is…… making CRAP jokes, it really is a foundational premise of design, and it’s deeply important (and thanks to our sense of humor usually quite memorable). The letters, of course, stand for:

ContrastRepetitionAlignmentProximity

Page 7: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

You read about itSo I’m going to give these to you in my words, along with a few quick examples, so you can get a good sense of how it works.

Page 8: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

Contrast

Basically stated, contrast means that things that are similar look similar but things that are different look clearly different. This keeps your reader from becoming confused and creating relationships that aren’t present.

It comes, of course, from literal contrast, the light-to-dark or black-to-white of an image. In design it often ends up being about color values.

Page 9: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

This image is a great

example, and it is also a

hyperlink to a great blog entry on

contrast, if you want to learn

more.

Page 10: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

RepetitionMaybe the easiest of these four concepts to define, repetition is, just as you’d guess, repeating something– a color, a logo, a typeface, a type style.

It unifies and organizes.

Page 11: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th
Page 12: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

Alignment

Alignment is about positioning on a page. Nothing should be put on haphazardly. There should be a reason and a measurement that guides where things are placed in relation to each other.

Page 13: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

The image to the right links to a post that has some cool

reflection on alignment. And there’s all kinds of alignment going on with the new Windows 8 start page.

Page 14: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

ProximityProximity is very similar in theory to alignment, but it’s more about grouping and use of white space.

Basically: similar things are grouped together, different things require space.

Page 15: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th
Page 16: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

Activity

You should, I hope, have been thinking about starting the In-Design tutorial. I want to stress that in this course we won’t be spending the time to go over all of the In-Design basics, but I will be taking you through some of the set-up as part of in-class activities, and I will be offering at least one outside-of-class session. You can also talk to Max and set a time to visit the CIM lab to get some extra In-Design help.

But make sure you are working on those tutorials. They matter. Based on exit comments and evals, not doing those tutorials was the big difference between success and failure for the last classes.

Page 17: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

But today…

I want us to use our new-found knowledge of C.R.A.P.– which you will read a bit more of– to do a little really basic Photoshop work in anticipation of your very first design task. What I need you to do is gather the following, quickly– let’s take no more than 4 minutes to do this. 1. A photo of yourself 2. A movie poster you like

Page 18: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

The task

Is to put yourself into the movie poster. I will walk you through one way to do it, on the overhead. Max and I will circulate to help you as you work. Also feel free to ask your classmates.

When you finish, post whatever you managed to put together to your Tumblr.

Page 19: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

Homework

Due to the holiday, we do not meet Monday.

For next Wednesday:

Read for class: Wysocki “The Multiple Media of Texts” and “With Eyes That Think and Compose and Think,” as well as Barthes “Rhetoric of the Image,” Benjamin “The Work of Art in the Era of Mechanical Reproduction,” (all on Niihka) and Kress “Reading Images”

Don’t forget your Tumblr post and design activity!

Page 20: Visual Rhetoric, August 28th

And…

Work on the

In-Design tutorial!