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Graphic
Design Communication
Philadelphia University
DESIGNER'S
STATEMENT
The
aesthetic comes in the selections and combinations of
letterforms.
The
function speaks to the communication. Working with type,
or to be more formal, typography, is a very curious
thing. Like some things, it looks deceptively simple.
After all, they are still the same twenty-six characters
we've all seen and dealt with since we were six years
old in first grade just learning to read (plus numbers
and punctuation, but you get the picture). A is still
A and Q is still Q. What most people (except designers
who work with type every day) fail to realize is that
typography is quite a difficult enterprise to master.
I've been "practicing" for twenty years and
I feel like I'm just now beginning to get the knack
of it all, let alone master it as a discipline.
The
thing about type is that it takes a tremendous amount
of trial and error. I tell my students this all the
time: it's the old "what if" principle ("what
if you tried this, or what if you tried that.").
And in most cases, a designer really can't tell until
he tries different things. Sure, a seasoned eye can
ward off some of the possibilities of a failed idea
before the get-go, but for the most part, there is the
part of the design process where the designer just has
to try many different approaches.
And
so it goes with type. A designer works with contrasts
and textures: darks with lights; serifs with sans serifs;
a script with a big, chunky slab serif; big against
little, few against many. It is this contrast, these
combinations, where I find that my interest lies. A
designer works with type as part of a palette in the
same way that a painter works with the colors of his
palette.
Type
can speak to the viewer. Type has attitude: type can
be quiet, it can be loud. Type can be conservative,
or it can be wild. By looking at any number of typefaces,
one can start to assign attributes to the look and feel
of certain typefaces. As soon as a designer begins to
work with letterforms, the designer is immediately faced
with the combination of these letterforms into words
or language. What do the letterforms say? (they must
say something because of the combination of the forms
into words). I've always been interested in what my
type says. I believe a designer must "think editorially"-they
must be concerned with what the words say. It is the
role of the designer to establish a hierarchy to the
information, determine an order and direction, all in
a manner to guide the viewer.
I've
always remembered a tried and true design axiom I learned
in school: visual + verbal = message. The visual could
come in any number of forms that a designer utilizes
in a piece of visual communication: imagery, whether
photographic or illustrative; color; conceptual approach;
scale: etc. The verbal is the combination of these letterforms
into language. All graphic design projects utilize typography
in some way or another. And the message is at the heart
of all of these projects. All of these elements combine
to support the message at hand, all coming back to the
initial conceit of the project. It's a roundabout cycle,
all working toward the finished piece. If any one part
is not working, it could throw off the balance of the
entire piece.
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