Wednesday, February 25, 2015

would I buy it

I think my add showed how flowers are used in a variety of ways. I used lighting from brighter lights in my studio shots, darker ones at the graveyard, and a blue tone for the bath shots. I filled my shots fully and tried my best to make the uneven curved lines in the bath shots look clean. I placed my logo in one of the four corners so it was repeating. I faded my logo in softer photos so it wouldn't overpower the shots. I didn't think reading my logo was a must after seeing my title page, because it had a distinct flower lay out, so when you saw the petals you thought, "Pick a Petal'" and recognized the design immediately. If I did not have a title page clearly showing my logo, I would change the logo to be readable. I wanted my slide show to go from; light, dark, and a cool tone. I ended the slideshow with my best image and started it with my next most successful shot. When I look through my slides, I see flowers in different spots, different lighting and they are in places where you would find flowers. My studio shots demonstrated different happy events where flowers can be given; valentines day, graduation, random small gifts, and a loving get well. My out of studio shots clashed with happy events and were more sad events where beautiful flowers are still used. I wanted darker and stronger colors for the shots in the graveyard, I believe I accomplished that well. I put my sister in a bath(she had clothes on) with flowers and told her just to soak. Without knowing my sister dozed off, I loved that without telling her, the flowers relaxed her and sent her into a slumber. Im proud of the bath shots and believe it shows how relaxing flowers are in the most simple of ways. I earnestly believe my project shows how often flowers are used and that you should buy them for others, or yourself, successfully making you want to buy my flowers.


Think about your ad project. Be critical. What is working? What is not? Think about your principles of design. Consider color theory. Negative space vs. framing? Did you place your logo productively? What about proportion? Did you use blending options enough? Overuse? I want you to look at each image in your slideshow and consider these questions as a jumping off point. When you are finished, consider sequence. Typically, you end with your strongest and begin with the next best shot, but you also want a nice flow from one image to the next. Really think about these questions and respond in a separate post. I want to know what you see before I tell you what I see.

No comments:

Post a Comment