Showing posts with label typography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label typography. Show all posts

Friday, May 19, 2017

Stay Dank & Slay

  


 

 



 



StayDankSlay.tumblr.com

I've been updating my visual design resume and
I came across StayDankSlay.tumblr.com blog I created to
archive the crazy amount of designs I developed while
working with Allposters(dot)com, in 2016.

I was hired as a contract designer but wore the hats of an
illustrator, production artist, and marketing team member.











Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Oakland Spokes Promo Merch

Here are some projects that are stemming from the need for grand opening promotional materials for Oakland Spokes' new location near Lake Merritt in Oakland, CA. The shop will open on November 27th.

First, are some tee-shirt designs for employees and for sale at the opening. Here are variations on the same design:

     "Oakland has Hella Spokes!"

Note: "Hella" is slang for, a lot of something (generally speaking) an idiom used mostly in the Bay area. This term has been used so much that there was an actual formal petition to put a large number (10^27) for it's meaning, check it out here: Make Hella Official

This one is probably one of my favorite tee color combos, very simple 1-color design:


I like the way this green color bounces off of the black:



Stickers:

I am all about stickers! Stickers are a great marketing tool to hand out out at events & social spots. They are basically functional business cards. I will have to post about my new stickers I recently had made from one of my pizza character illustrations.

This Oakland Spokes sticker is a simple, 1-color designs & directs people to the Oakland Spokes Website:
 


Fliers for the opening, showing some of the kid's bikes:



Grand opening Fliers:

Info and the rundown of what is going down on Plaid Friday. Plaid Friday is such a great concept coming out of Oakland. It represents an alternative to the big box store's "Black Friday" & focuses on promoting local entrepreneurs & locally owned businesses invested in the surrounding community. You can read more about Plaid Friday, here: plaidfriday.com

These fliers fit 4 to a letter sized page which reduces the amount of prints you have to make.


A black & white version of the fliers to be more cost effective:


Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Oakland Spokes Bike Lounge



My buddy, Brian is opening a bike lounge in Oakland, dubbed Oakland Spokes. This is a tertiary of the national organization called Spokes National. I have worked with Brian on previous Richmond Spokes graphic design, store signage, & promotional materials.

I am now able to work with him on his new venture in my neighborhood called Oakland Spokes Bike Lounge. Using previous recognizable Richmond Spokes icons and imagery, as well as the logo-mark, I have transformed branding package for use as Oakland Spokes. 

Starting off with the original radii design (see original at the bottom of this post) that I started for Richmond Spokes, I put in place the Oakland text. I also reduced the amount of colors to just one. These are 2-different variation of the same mark. I am a fan of brand diversification & feel that having a few branches of the same logo- marks can really be used in different media. I will use the straight on circular icon, for stickers to promote the bike shop.


From the original circular radii icons, I started the extension of using the full title of the bike shop:











These are my favorite horizontal logo-mark designs:











This is aversion of the horizontal logo-mark containing the name
of the bike shop
on one line:




Here are a couple of ways I have been using these designs, so far:

Instagram photo showing the plan for the bike shop:

This was a image for Facebook showing the design and address of the
imagined retail space:




Imagining some letter heads for correspondence:

  


These are the original Richmond Spokes circular logo-marks.
These are slightly more complicated having 2 colors instead
of just the 1 green color

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Gradius & Type Design

As always, I am constantly reviewing my portfolio
finding cool stuff to re-organize and show. I enjoy
looking back at my work and selecting designs and
correlating them with new stuff that I do along the
same routes.

I have recently been doing a lot of typeface designs,
logo-mark designs, and typeface illustrations for
freelance clients. While reviewing my academic work
some of my designs have a theme rooted in classic
typeface design using calligraphic techniques. 

I am very interested in the effect that hand painted signs
and custom lettering has when representing an
organization. The craft it takes to create letters and
characters is an amazing pursuit. I started admiring
custom lettering as far back as I can remember. I would
get lost in hand painted signs and redraw them in my
mind. Different lettering and signage have stayed with me.

Lettering and signage is a part of our daily lives. We see it
everywhere, it represents businesses, indicates everything
we do, guides us to locations and warns us from dangers.
Taken that into account and understanding what artists on
the radical spectrum have done with custom lettering, such
as graffiti artists, modern calligraphers, and painters. Lettering
has become a hybrid modern art form both breaking and
reinforcing typographic laws.

I am greatly inspired by these radical artists as well as by
formal craftsmen of the typographic discipline.

Here is an example of my take on typeface design





Here are some pages from my type specimen book
highlighting the development of this typeface.




showing the technique for creating the Gradius typeface.


Versions of a promotional poster for Gradius.


I like the final version of the promotional poster
it includes a lot of the hand-drawn elements that
are essential to its character.

I'll be printing out a copy of this poster and posting it up.

A few examples of how Gradius would be used in combo with
images, illustrations, & other dynamic typefaces.



And another glyph layout version


Here are some more sketches on how I
was experimenting with type design.

some early design sketches.

making the gradius letters



refining the typeface with tracing paper and ruled lines.



and some comps for the type spec book layout and design.