For this assignment, we are tasked with conceptualising and creating a poster that is appropriate for 2019’s Singapore Design Week. Here’s the process of how I developed my poster:

 

Field Trip: National Design Centre

 

With the era of the tailors and the dressmakers in the 1960s, designs focused more on aesthetics. There were a lot of western influences, and Singapore was growing into a regional textile hub. As the years passed, Singapore emerged as an economic powerhouse, and with that, its local design industry began to take shape. There was a demand for new lifestyle choices, leading to the flourish or arts, cultural, and fashion sectors. There was also an increase in architecture practices. Singapore can be seen to be moving towards having more sustainable and functional designs, creating a better lifestyle and a better world for its people. Also, despite prior and current influences in design from other countries, Singapore still holds fast to its traditional textiles and designs, even incorporating it into current styles to create designs that are local and unique.

 

Preliminary Design: Visual Research, Slogan, and Moodboard

1. Visual Research

The poster communicates creativity and playfulness. Most of the elements may be very angular, but they also resemble building blocks that children play with and put together to form buildings. Some of the pyramids and houses amongst the buildings also have eyes and mouths on them, giving the city a whimsical look. Even the creatures created are nothing like that of realistic animals or humans. This adds to that idea of freedom of creativity and the ability to experiment and play. The whole poster is made up of a cluster of smaller images, enticing the viewer to take a closer look and “explore” the little city. A strong colour contrast is used, mainly between shades of blue and yellow, which helps the forms stand out against the background. The title of the poster, “Get Smart”, is placed within speech bubbles, preventing it from blending into clutter behind it. There is another speech bubble with additional information text inside, its orange colour helping to draw attention to it after the viewer reads the title. With the knowledge that this poster is to promote a kids art workshop, I think it had done a great job at bringing out the feelings of creativity, curiosity, and playfulness in a poster despite only working with two main colours.

 

2. Slogan

To come up with a relevant slogan for Singapore Design Week 2019, I read up on The Future of Singapore Design, and picked out key phrases such as “nurture industry-ready talents”, “use design for innovation and growth”, “advance the SG brand though raisin design appreciation on home-ground”, and “emotional connections”, and “supports creative culture and eco-system”.

From there, I began listing down relevant words in hopes of sparking an idea:

nurture, innovate, communicate, speak, envision, identity, construct, creation, reinventing, creativity, flow, community, playground, influence

Me trying to list out relevant words for the slogan.

 

Playing around with the list of words, I came up with a few (horribly cheesy) slogans:

  1. Create & Innovate
  2. Shape the Playground of Tomorrow / The Playground of Expression
  3. Create & Connect
  4. Express & Experiment with Design
  5. Let your Creations Speak

Eventually, the concept I worked on was how, to me, Singapore design week was about individuals from different areas of design coming together as a community to create something as one. Hence, the slogan I choose in the end was,

“Connect. Construct. Create.”

 

3. Moodboards

Moodboard 1: Geometric and Organic

 

For this concept, I wanted to create something that had clean, line shapes and geometric forms to represent the digital age of design. However, I also wanted to use organic forms to tie in the fact that as designers, we are also moving towards creating sustainability within our work.

 

Moodboard 2: Sustainabiliy

 

For this moodboard, I was focusing more on sustainability, hence the organic elements like a tree stump, leaves, and spherical forms. I added in a few geometric elements to show the combination of traditional and digital art styles.

 

Moodboard 3: Layering

For this final moodboard, I wanted to show how current works refer to those from the past, and one way to show that was layering images one on top of another. The end result would be a merging of styles, the images building on one another to create something new as a whole.

 

Drawing thumbnails for layout ideation.

When trying to come up with a layout, I started off with trying to combine elements within a moodboard together to form a poster. From there, I was able to come up with two designs:

 

Design 1 – Let Your Creations Speak

The concept for this was to have a humanoid form with a solid colour in the background with doodles of varying styles layered on top. This was to show artists coming together to create a “living” work that expresses their creativity and identity as a whole. However, the details on the humanoid’s face made it look like a robot, and without the title, it could easily be interpreted as some poster for an engineering event. A way to resolve this would be either to crop the image all the way to its head and focus on the elements there or crop off the head and focus more on the design on the body.

 

Design 2: Express & Experiment with Design

For this design, I used coloured circles to represent artists, and within each of them, there is a form that is different from the others, representing their individual styles and creativity. These dots are connected together by varying lines to show them forming a community. They also look like molecules coming together like in chemistry, creating the feeling of experimentation. The title is a mix of fonts that fit within a diamond frame, but the word “week” trailing downwards may prove to be hard to read. As for the circles, it would be better if their connection had some form of relation. For instance, the designs from two different circles can be combined in a third circle to express them coming together to form something new.

 

Design Explorations

Class critique notes:

The hierarchy of the texts can be seen. The doofles within circles can be more precise and have more relation between one another. Perhaps, they could be images of found items, and the circles around the text can come together to form an amalgamation of organic shapes. Overall, the poster is bottom heavy and has a lot of free space at the top; shift the texts upwards to give them more space. There are a lot of typefaces used, so it’s a bit confusing and messy. Also, use thicker fonts (current ones are a bit too thin). The text doesn’t have to be broken so much and can be arranged in relation to the shapes (e.g: the title within the diamond shape). The images used are a little too vector-y; make them more original / organic.

 

Class critique notes:

The title and the shapes behind are fighting for attention, and the the colours in the shapes make the text hard to read. The brushstroke font isn’t working well with the poster; keep to the theme of organic and geometric coming together. The weight if the poster is too top heavy; there are a lot of free spaces surrounding the edges. Background makes for good contrast, but a perception of depth can be added. The shapes’ movements can be emphasised, their flow leading the viewer’s eyes. TIP: Turn the poster upside-down to get a better idea of how balanced the elements in the poster actually are.

 

Design Refinement and Mock-up

Refinement 1

Geometric forms were added, with the organic blobs layered in a way that they seem to be emerging from / trapped inside those forms. This gives the poster more depth. The title is still hard to read against the shapes behind it, so those can be shifted away / made darker. The arrangement of the text and forms leave quite a few empty spaces; those can be better used. Overall, still quite top heavy.

 

Refinement 2

The title has been brought down to the side and can be read much more clearly, however, the size is a little too small. Also, the geometric forms can be cut down. The organic shapes can also be better arranged to ensure balance between positive and negative spaces (turn it upside down!)

For this last assignment, as an extention of the Singapore Design Week poster we did previously, we are to design a brochure to promote the event. To start off, these are the five designers I have chosen to include in my brochure:

1. Yah-Leng Yu

Foreign Policy Design Group

createYU is the creative persona of Yah-Leng Yu.
Her day job is the Ambassador of Design at Foreign Policy Design Group. During her off-work hours, she gets quite involved in public art, art exhibitions and non-digital photography.

Yah-Leng was formally trained at the Art Institute of Boston before moving to New York City where her creative career blossomed. Her years in the digital design industry mostly serving high end luxury fashion and life-style clients, have provided her the in-depth and rich experience in the design and development of interactive media for sizeable upscale brands. Her specialty includes creative & digital strategy consultancy, creative & art direction, design & typography.

“We wanted to build a design practice that different from the bigger international agencies that were the main players in Singapore during that time. We started with two and today we are about 12. The name Foreign Policy is really a reminder to ourselves that we should keep a more global perspective and diversity when we approach design.”

http://www.vanschneider.com/design-in-singapore-featuring-foreign-policy

http://foreignpolicy.design/portfolio/branding/papa-palheta-brand-experience-kit/

http://foreignpolicy.design/portfolio/branding/papa-palheta-brand-experience-kit/

 

2. Melvin Ong

Desinere

Melvin graduated with First-Class Honours from Central St Martin’s College of Art & Design in 2010. While in the UK, Melvin had the opportunity to be under the tutelage of established designers such as Chris Lefteri and Reiko Kaneko. He then went on to work with London design agency Brand42, where he worked with CNN, Johnnie Walker and MailOnline. Melvin has also exhibited his personal work at Tent London in 2010, and at the Milan Salone Satellite in 2011. In 2012, he moved back to Singapore to establish his studio, Desinere. Desinere launched its first collection at Design Tide Tokyo 2012, and later at Tortona Design Week in Milan in 2013. Desinere has also been active participant of the annual “Singaplural” design week organised by SFIC (Singapore Furniture Industries Council). Desinere was also part of the team that worked on the frst collection of Singapore Icons porcelainware, produced by Supermama and Kihara, which was awarded the Presidents Design Award in 2013.

In 2014, Melvin was named ‘Rising Asian Talent’ by Maison et Objet Asia.

http://www.desinere.com.sg/project/monolith/

http://www.desinere.com.sg/project/monolith/

 

3. Gabriel Tan

Outofstock

Gabriel Tan graduated from the National University of Singapore with a Bachelor of Industrial Design in 2007. Prior to forming Outofstock, he won the Electrolux Design Lab Award, Bombay Saphire Designer Glass Asia Award, and an IDEA Bronze Award. Between 2010 to 2014,  Gabriel has lectured at Lasalle College of the Arts, Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts, and the University of Oregon. In 2014, he was invited to serve as a jury member of the Product Design Lions Award at Cannes Lions in France.

Gabriel Tan is a co-founders of design quartet, Outofstock, which was formed in 2006 with Gustavo Maggio and Sebastián Alberdi after meeting at Electrolux Design Lab a year earlier. The studio has received multiple awards, including the President’s Design Award 2010 (Design of The Year for the ‘Black Forest’ table) and Rising Talent of 2015 in Maison et Objet Asia.

http://www.outofstockdesign.com/saturn/

4. Jeanne Gang

Gang Studio

Architect and MacArthur Fellow Jeanne Gang, FAIA, Int. FRIBA, is the founding principal of Studio Gang. A member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and a Chevalier de l’Ordre national de la Légion d’honneur, Jeanne is internationally renowned for a design process that foregrounds the relationships between individuals, communities, and environments. Her diverse body of work spans scales and typologies, expanding beyond architecture’s conventional boundaries to pursuits ranging from the development of stronger materials to fostering stronger communities. Her approach has resulted in some of today’s most compelling architecture, including Aqua Tower, the Arcus Center for Social Justice Leadership, and Writers Theatre. She is currently designing major projects throughout the Americas and Europe, including the Gilder Center for Science, Education, and Innovation at the American Museum of Natural History in New York; a unified campus for the California College of the Arts in San Francisco; and the new United States Embassy in Brasilia, Brazil.

5. Moshe Safdie

Safdie Architects

Moshe Safdie is an architect, urban planner, educator, theorist, and author. Over a celebrated 50-year career, Safdie has explored the essential principles of socially responsible design with a distinct visual language. A citizen of Israel, Canada and the United States, Moshe Safdie graduated from McGill University. After apprenticing with Louis I. Kahn in Philadelphia, Safdie returned to Montréal to oversee the master plan for the 1967 World Exhibition. In 1964 he established his own firm to realize Habitat ’67, an adaptation of his undergraduate thesis and a turning point in modern architecture.

Author of four books and a frequent essayist and lecturer, Safdie’s global practice includes projects in North and South America, the Middle East, the developing world and throughout Asia and Australia. Projects span a wide range of typologies, including airports, museums, performing arts, libraries, housing, mixed use and entire cities. His honors include the Companion of the Order of Canada, the Gold Medal from both the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada and the American Institute of Architects, la Medaille du Merité from the Order of Architects of Québec, Canada, and Israel’s Rechter Prize. The Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum awarded Mr. Safdie the National Design Award for Lifetime Achievement in 2016.

Visual Research and Design Exploration:

Moving on to the brochure itself, here are three types of brochures that caught my eye:

This brochure has a simple accordion fold, but with a few die-cuts across each crease, it makes it look more three-dimensional than it already was. The way the lines crosses nearly the full length of the brochure serves as a good way to lead the eye from one page to the next. In comparison to my poster design, the geometric forms be treated with such die-cuts to create depth on a flat piece of paper.

When folded, this brochure allows for the reader to tug at two corners of it to fully open it, twisting the paper open as it unfolds. Because of this action, the content hidden inside has the potential to seemingly burst out, the center diamond quickly capturing the reader’s attention, especially so if the colours have high contrast. With this fold, I was planning to have the organic forms I used in my poster as the outer-most image, and when the brochure is opened, it may seem as though the coloured blobs are dispersing/exploding, revealing the content in the middle of the page.

This last fold is my favourite of the three. It has an interesting triangular-accordion-ish fold, and when it is left open, it retains a geometric form that is still flexible and manipulable. When folded, it can also function like a book; the folded pages have the freedom to be flipped like book pages. It adds dimension to a flat piece of paper and provides interesting, triangular panels to work with. It would work well with the elements I used in my previous design, as they are both geometric and can create a bigger emphasis together.

Mock-up Folds:

With reference to the brochures above, I was able to make three mock-up folds.

Animated GIF - Find & Share on GIPHY

The effect was nice, and folds back quite nicely. But the die-cut areas were much more fragile and had the tendency of bending easily.

 

Animated GIF - Find & Share on GIPHY

The way this fold enlarges as you open it is really interesting. However, it was a little difficult to close. Not to mention, the panels on the front and back are hard to match up in terms of alignment (the back text will not be parallel to the front ones when it opens up if on the diamond back).

 

Animated GIF - Find & Share on GIPHY

Definitely picking this one. It folds back quite easily compared to the previous one, but still retains the interesting square/triangular panels.

 

Design Refinement:

Front page:

Back page:

Comments: The designer images can be shifted around more to create rhythm. There are quite a few panels that are blank. Suggestion: remove a column or two and rearrange the content. The title seems to have to compete for attention with the other graphic elements within the same panel. Maybe increase the size a little. The texts need wider margins along the edges and maybe reduce the text a little. Use colours to create rhythm / give emphasis to the text. Maybe give images accents among the edges to make each designer stand out from the page. Overall, resolve the blank spaces by reducing the amount of panels.