Monday, April 30, 2012

Goo Goo for GOCA

This was the final assignment for my visual journalism class. The idea was to create a 2 page spread from scratch with entirely our work. I chose Serbia native Gordana Rasic, a molecular biology major at University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. She also runs her own fashion design company called GOCA designs. She provided me with these great photographs in which i chose my color template for the spread. I took the pink tones used in the drop cap, sidebar and Serbia itself from the color of her lipstick. I chose the pale yellow color for the other countries from the background with the floral designs. I chose to make the pictures very large because they are so colorful and interesting. I mean she's a weird looking girl. I chose the headline, I don't really remember how, but I liked all the g's and o's so I decided to focus on the typography a lot. The sidebar is all about her struggles trying to pursue fashion while her parents rather her focus on her school work. I was pretty satisfied with this spread, not my best work, but I didn't hate it. 

Serbia, land of the raspberry


For this assignment we were to create a map of of country for our final project. We were doing a story on an immigrant to the United States and create an info graphic highlighting their native country. My story was about a girl whose family comes from Serbia, a country in eastern Europe. When I have done projects like this in the past I have used Adobe Illustrator, so it took me a minute to get used to layering on Adobe InDesign. The trick is to trace over a photography of the country we chose. By locking the map and making it more transparent it was easy to trace over it. I then traced each country individually and the Adriatic sea. I then created an embossing effect on Serbia itself to highlight it, not just with a different color.

Not so Frida


For this assignment we were given a story, written by our teacher, and photographs and were to create two different layouts to display his story. It was about a review of a new restaurant, La Cocina de Frida, in Andersonville. In the first layout I tried to keep it simple. Two of the main photographs at the top and story underneath. I added some embellishments with the horizontal green stripes to liven up the page a bit. I got a lot of disapprovement from my classmates, but I like them and I don't think they are too distracting. In the second layout I took out the embellishments and focused more on the typography. I created a symmetrical art portion in the top for the photos with the headline underneath.

Tickle me (un)red


This project, similar to my last post, was to restore an old photograph. Along with using the clone stamp tool I also retouched the colors and the borders. The most important part was to get the red tones out of the photo since they are completely overtaking the pictures. By playing around with the color levels using the levels and colors tools I was able to decrease the amount of reds.

Restore me!


For this project we were to take a pretty damaged photograph and restore it using Adobe Photoshop. The only tool I used with this was the clone stamp tool. By cloning small pieces of the photograph near the torn parts you can then clone that color onto the holes in the photography. With a keen eye and a lot of pertinence I was able to restore this photo and make it look brand new!

Turtle Wax

This was my midterm project. We were assigned to create a web site homepage using Adobe InDesign. I chose the turtle theme because honestly I did it very last minute and ran out of time and didn't know what else I could do. I started with creating the layout on a sheet of paper. I drew the headline banner and worked from there. Then my three photographs on the bottom, adding in a Turtle Wax advertisement, the Facebook and Twitter icons and some of my own writing. The final product wasn't really something I was happy with or proud of at all, but this is what happened.

Smile for the camera

Above are two photographs that were taken by me of my pet turtle. The top photograph was taken using a digital camera, the second was then edited using Adobe Photoshop. The first thing I did was crop the pictures because there was a lot of excess stuff on the sides, trying to keep the rule of thirds. I then sharpened the photograph slightly as well as toned the colors to make it seem more clear and vibrant. As journalists we aren't allowed to tamper with the photos too much, but just enough to give them a better look.