Visual Design
Welcome to the class thread for all professors and students of Visual Design!
Below will be a post from the introductory professor explaing more about this particular class/medium and what you can expect to learn. Have fun guys!
(This class was perviously a one professor class, but now will be converted to the community class so as to keep intact all resources previously posted.)
Original Professor Material by Nina
Current Professors: N/A
Welcome to Visual Development!
If you've signed up, great! If you're just interested and want to see what I say before participating, also great! You can start on these projects at any point in time, you've just got to do the projects in order. You can always PM me if you want to finish the projects without your peers seeing. Remember to add me on Skype! miss.nina.r
If you've signed up, great! If you're just interested and want to see what I say before participating, also great! You can start on these projects at any point in time, you've just got to do the projects in order. You can always PM me if you want to finish the projects without your peers seeing. Remember to add me on Skype! miss.nina.r
TUTOR: Nina
COURSE: Visual Development
COURSE: Visual Development
WHAT IS VISUAL DEVELOPMENT?
I made it up. Sorta. I've given the name Visual Development to encompass the way I was taught in my school to create preliminary work for illustrations. We never had a specific class dedicated to this topic as it just became a required aspect of ALL classes. We can't show up to class with a finished painting that a professor has never seen before, and even if we did it would be terrible because we'd already be done when the professor has so much for us to fix! For this reason, you always show preliminary work of what you are planning to do in a format that helps you communicate your thought process.
The smallest pipeline a class would require would be this, with critique between each step.
The smallest pipeline a class would require would be this, with critique between each step.
Thumbnails —> Composition Sketches —> Final
However, a complete pipeline works a little like this:
[Brainstorm/Reference Building —> Thumbnails —> Research] —> Composition Sketches —> [Value Comps —> Color Comps] —> Draft —> Final
Thumbnails | Research | Reference
Three topics for the first lesson? Well you see, they all get intertwined so we've got to cover them all to start!
![[PokeCommunity.com] Visual Design [PokeCommunity.com] Visual Design](https://i.imgur.com/l8fQ6Kk.jpg)
Thumbnails are very quick sketches that are meant to catalog different ideas and compositions visually for a work of art. You should not spend long on these. In the beginning it will be fine, but just remember your goal is to explore ideas quickly so you can spend less time struggling later on. You can draw out borders yourself, or you can print out a sheet of boxes to draw your thumbnails. If your project has specific final dimensions, remember to have your thumbnails proportional to the final dimensions. Your thumbnails should be refined enough that you personally should know what's going on, but they aren't mean to paint a complete picture. Give yourself a sheet of rectangles/squares and just draw until you run out of ideas, research, draw, research, etc. I often do mine in front of a computer and easily switch back and forth. Don't forget you can write an idea map with your thumbnails, but for this course I don't need to see it, and your thumbnails need to mostly speak for themselves without captions.
WHAT IS RESEARCH?
"Nina I know what research is!" I know you know how to do an english paper, but just listen, ok? Research is building your personal understanding of what it is your are going to draw. You can easily find a picture of something you don't know how to draw, but it goes a mile if you understand your subject matter. Unlike english class, you don't need to source anything. Wikipedia is your friend! Research is looking at and gathering picture or written information on your subject. While doing research, your gather reference material.
WHAT IS REFERENCE?
Reference is visual images you are looking at to either inform or inspire you for you project. Gathering a collection of realistic photos of you object you are drawing from various angles is informative reference. Then, thinking about expanding your idea about the object, find the ways that the object has been represented through art or design. Find images that show how people see and understand your object. You can also find style reference. You see an artist use a technique for an unrelated subject matter, but want to apply it to your current image. Also reference.
When do I credit reference?
Real talk. If you are relying on a reference heavily enough that you feel you have to source it, that's a no-no in the professional art world. There's a lot of talk and guides on visual plagiarism, and it's a pretty grey area. I feel that if you draw from a pose, not trace it, and aren't trying to capture the likeness of the model, then that's far enough from the image. As such, you do not need to credit links or urls for the reference you turn in this class. It's not necessary to cite all of your influences, because they are not directly informing you.
What about in graphic design tags that credit artwork? Well, if you were a graphic designer professional you can not do that. You would have to obtain the rights to what ever image you use or make your own. I know that everyone on the internet just nabs japanese art and uses it in their graphics here and elsewhere, but in the art world this is highly not ok. Understanding that this is a hobby class, you may use other's works and credit it for learning purposes only. I just wanted to make you all aware of how it works professionally.
WHERE DO I START?
Well, that's the thing, you can start at any point! I was collecting reference of swords for no particular project, and I got inspired, so I gathered reference more for rapiers and final fantasy characters. I started in reference, and then moved on to a few thumbnails, pictured above.
At this point, I haven't done any research on rapiers, fighting stances, or historical usages of rapiers and fencers. I also haven't done specific visual research on rapiers that had pasts, I just scrolled through pinterest. So I've started on thumbnails and reference, but next I need to do targeted research, which will help me gather more reference, and inform my next round of thumbnails.
Project 0 | Part 1
In my lesson plan I wrote the first project will be responding to an article. However, I think maybe that was moving too fast that you now have to respond to text, so we'll be doing a mini self-directed prompt. We will end up only doing 10 - 20 thumbnails with some reference, and 1 - 2 comps.
So! I want three things from you:
So! I want three things from you:
1) Think of an idea that goes like this:
_____ with _____.
You can describe the project example above as bunny with sword, specifically viera with rapier. The point is that I want you to focus on two subjects so you can focus on a simpler idea.
2) Pick a ratio.
The final size is not of concern right now, but you want to start developing your images with a specific format in mind. For now you're not going to be locked in, but just pick between landscape, or portrait.
3) Research/Reference/Thumbnails
Research does not need to be documented, but I will ask you specifics about things in your thumbnails. Reference will not be turned in yet, however keep saving it for later. You can either save images, put them in a tumblr tag, or create a pinterest board.
_____ with _____.
You can describe the project example above as bunny with sword, specifically viera with rapier. The point is that I want you to focus on two subjects so you can focus on a simpler idea.
2) Pick a ratio.
The final size is not of concern right now, but you want to start developing your images with a specific format in mind. For now you're not going to be locked in, but just pick between landscape, or portrait.
3) Research/Reference/Thumbnails
Research does not need to be documented, but I will ask you specifics about things in your thumbnails. Reference will not be turned in yet, however keep saving it for later. You can either save images, put them in a tumblr tag, or create a pinterest board.
What I want to see from you is 5 - 10 thumbnails! No color, no values, lines only! They must all be in the ratio you have chosen, and that's it. You've got to try it first for me to see! Take as long as you like, but don't worry this first part shouldn't take long. They don't even have to be "good" thumbnails, as you can see I've already x-ed out one of mine.
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