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Distinguish design requirements of various products as they relate to purposes and audiences

TA Standard VII, 7.18s. Distinguish design requirements of various products as they relate to purposes and audiences. F. unction : purpose (sometimes several). Good design follows the “3 Fs” of communication. F.

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Distinguish design requirements of various products as they relate to purposes and audiences

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  1. TA Standard VII, 7.18s Distinguish design requirements of various products as they relate to purposes and audiences

  2. F unction: purpose (sometimes several) Good design follows the “3 Fs” of communication F orm evolves out of a clear purpose: if it’s meant to last, that will dictate some of the form (size, type of paper, how to be distributed, etc) F ormat: the internal design of the product (margins, type styles, color, etc.)

  3. Brochures • Two basic design strategies: • Headline—plan brochure around headlines used • Feature head—title • Main support heads—become heads • for the copy blocks • Attention to Action A-I-D-C-A • Get their attention, stimulate interest, create • desire, build conviction, call to action

  4. Brochures, cont. • Simplicity • don’t try to achieve too much in one brochure • use ample margins to avoid a jammed-up appearance • Purpose and content • dictate design, i.e. an announcement brochure calls for • stronger display • Consider size carefully • size determines cost of paper • Paper comes in standard sizes and price depends on • how many can be cut from a sheet • A few inches can double the price

  5. Pamphlets • Easily distributed in many places using racks in libraries, schools, offices, and fairs. • Passed out at meetings and/or mailed • Important to think through the purpose of the piece and its intended audience. • May contain many elements of a book: cover, table of contents, copyright information, text, index, etc. • Margins important—frame text like a mat frames art

  6. Stationery • Should coordinate with other materials • (business cards, invoices, envelopes) • Use logo and/or typeface to build • recognition • Design shouldn’t interfere with message • Two types: traditional (symmetrical, type • forms square or inverted pyramid) or • modern (asymmetrical) • Paper should be compatible with image as • well as envelope choice

  7. Book Jackets/Magazine Covers • Most important page, creates first impression • Attracts target audience & lures them inside • Maintains identity & reflects its personality • Must “sell” the contents • Should contain essential information: date, price, volume and issue numbers

  8. Magazines Visual appeal is vital Break of the book—designating where items will be placed. Traditional plan groups constant features in first and last few pages; strongest article placed in center of magazine Page layout design: square up elements, have dominant element, use consistency while avoiding monotony Pages should be dynamic: message must be alive to be effective

  9. Newsletters • Informative but brief and to-the-point • Target audience • Contains specialized information not found elsewhere • Great PR tool that is cost efficient, well received • Needs its own personality, look, style • Consistency—all issues look basically the same • Short, easily understood paragraphs • Personal letter from a friend: short, easily understood • paragraphs, • Chatty style, ragged right • Simple design, limited graphic elements

  10. References Angus, Jeff. (2003). Cover Story. Book Tech Magazine. Retrieved on July 25, 2004 from http://www.creativepro.com/img/story/011404_coverstory.pdf. Bear, Jacci Howard. (n.d.) First Impressions—Creating a basic identity system. Desktop Publishing. Retrieved July 25, 2004 from http://desktoppub.about.com/library/weekly/aa011601a.htm. Conover, Theodore E. (1995). Graphic Communications Today. New York: West Publishing Co. DiMarzio, Al. (n.d.). Designing Brochures that Work. HB Graphics. Retrieved July 25, 2004 from http://www.hbgraphics.com/articles/design_broch.htm. Spreading the word: Designing brochures. Interpretive Signage: Principles and Practice. Retrieved on July 25, 2004 from http://www.interpretivesigns.qut.edu.au/brochures.html.

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