Monday, June 14, 2010
Friday, June 11, 2010
Thursday, June 10, 2010
Time to make a PORTFOLIO!
requirements:
- 12 best images, designs, etc
- 3 sentence blurb about how you made, altered, created, or what the project is
- a creative blog title
- an interesting blog design and layout
http://www.blogger.com/
if you want your flash projects as a part of it, come and see me, we can make that happen...
here are some examples from digital photo
Friday, June 4, 2010
details
be sure you can tell what your object is when you are done! it should be obvious and interesting!
t-shirts!!!
We will be printing one or two of our class designs from today next week on the Seniors final day. What we need to create is a single color design that we can transfer to a screen. the process works like this:
- Step 1
Open a photo you wish to use in Adobe Photoshop. I will be using a photograph of a car that I took in Germany.
*You can use a scanned image, or an image you found on the internet. However make sure you use a higher resolution image for better results. Also check with the owner of any image you use from the internet so you don't infringe on any copyright laws. - Step 2
Select the Polygon Lasso Tool from the Toolbox on the left-hand side.
*there are or coarse more advanced ways to create a selection, but to simplify this tutorial I will use the Polygon Lasso Tool as it is a fairly easy tool to use in Photoshop. - Step 3
In this step I will make a selection of just the car portion of my image since I do not want the background part of this photo in my screen print.
Find a starting point in the photo and click to activate the Polygon Lasso Tool. - Step 4
Now piont any click around your image like you are tracing the image. Once you go completely around the image and get back to your start point. You will notice the Polygon Lasso Tool shows a small circle near where the mouse pointer is. This indicates the starting point and will close your selection when clicked. You will now notice a dashed line outlining what you have selected.
- Step 5
Since I want to delete the background portion of the photo I will need to inverse my selection. Currently I have made a selection of the car in this photograph.
Go to the top Menu Bar under: Select>Inverse - Step 6
This does exactly what it implies, it inverses the selection. Now everything except the car is selected.
- Step 7
Now your ready to delete the background portion of this image. Make sure your background color is white and hit the delete button on your keyboard. Your background will turn white.
To deselect go to the top Menu bar under: Selection>Deselect - Step 8
This process will prepare your image for a one color screen.
Next go the top Menu bar under: Image>Adjustments>Threshold
In the Threshold Panel use the slider to achieve the amount of threshold you would like. Make sure Preview is checked in the Threshold dialog box to see your results. Note that the black parts of the image will be the color of the screen printing paint you choose for your silk screen. Once you get it the way you want click OK. - Step 9
Now go to you top Menu bar under: File>Save As
This will ensure you are saving your edited image as a different file so you don't save over the original. I usually save to the Desktop so I can easily find my image. - Step 10
Now your ready to print on to your transparency paper/film. Just add your transparency paper/film to your printer and print.
*Your transparency paper/film should have a gritty side and a smooth slick side. You will most likely want to print on the gritty side. Read the directions of the transparency paper/film directions for proper printing.
*Some printer do not print on the same side that you put your paper in. To check this take a peice of blank paper and write UPSIDE on the sheet with a pen. Then place the sheet in the paper tray. Then print any image onto that paper. If it prints on the same side as the side you wrote UPSIDE on, then you know it prints in the same orientation. If it prints on the opposite side, then you know the printer flips the page, and or prints on the bottom side. This will help you place the trancparency in to print on the correct side.
*Most new printers show with a small icon on the printer paper tray the correct way to insert the paper. - Step 11
My next Article on eHow explains How To Screen Print. Click the link below located in the Resources section of this page.
Wednesday, June 2, 2010
Updated contest...
"Imagine if it were attorney's or contractors: I want you 10 to build me a house and I'll pay the one that I like." That, says Jeff Barlow, president of the Seattle chapter of the American Institute of Graphic Arts, is exactly what Bumbershoot is doing with their contest to find a permanent logo for the annual festival.
Each year Bumbershoot commissions a different designer to illustrate an advertising and promotions campaign for the festival, but in celebration of their 40th festival, Bumbershoot brass decided to hold a contest to find a permanent logo for the festival, with the creator of the chosen logo going home with a gold pass to this year's festival, but no money. The response--most notably in comments on Bumbershoot's site and on Twitter--from the local graphic arts community hasn't been positive.
"Basically, I think it devalues our whole industry," says Kevin Gordon, a local freelance designer. "It allows people to get something at a really low value. And the people that are submitting stuff are probably fine with that, and they're probably not the best people in the industry that you'd want to get work from anyways."
Bumbershoot spokesperson Mikhael Williams says the festival's not trying to devalue anything. Bumbershoot, Williams says, employs an in-house design manager, and pays a different designer every year to re-imagine the festival in a visual way for their advertising and promotion campaign (as seen above).
"I cannot emphasize enough that this was specifically thought of and conceived of as one of the 40 ways to celebrate the 40th festival...and engage the creative community here in Seattle," Williams said, referencing Bumbershoot's "40 Ways to Celebrate Bumbershoot" series of events and happenings this summer. "I think if it was a strictly financial issue, we would not be contracting designers, and we would be doing it in-house."
Barlow says money is not the issue here. He says firms like his, jelvetica, do pro bono work. The primary issue at hand, he says, is that working on speculation is going to mean a lot of designers putting in a lot of effort that will ultimately be wasted.
"I don't think there's anything malicious," says Barlow, who's been in contact with Bumbershoot about the issue, and believes the two parties could come to a conclusion that satisfied the festival's idea and local designers. "I don't think they're just trying to be cheap. They just didn't realize what they had done. They didn't realize there was a huge contingency of the creative community out there that would oppose this."
Williams says Bumbershoot's not opposed to talking the issue out further, but she doesn't expect the festival to change course. Barlow says that if Bumbershoot does go through with the contest, there will be a "firestorm of negative reaction."
"Considering the contest has been up for four days and my inbox is full," he says, "they've pushed a button that I really think if they un-pushed would be better for everybody."