Archive for the ‘Typography’ Category

Business Cards

Posted at December 6th, 2007 in Branding, Graphics, Marketing, Print Design, Typography, Work Journal | 3 Comments »

This is me

or, an introduction to my portfolio and brand.

Hi folks! It has been a while since my last posting. I’m afraid that, beyond my own expectations, school has further ramped up since the final project. This is a bit of my own fault since I decided to add two additional classes with larger outside projects. As a result, I am currently involved in producing an online magazine, a branding project and all of my various portfolio-related projects.

While my portfolio is still being developed (Object Oriented Programming makes things such fun), I wanted to show off my business card. Hit the cut for various looks and information!

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DVD Packaging - Skies Over Europe

Posted at September 15th, 2007 in Graphics, Print Design, Typography, Work Journal | No Comments »

I can Sew Header

One of the larger projects I was involved in last term was the creation of a DVD packaging for the documentary, “The Memphis Belle: A Story of A Flying Fortress,” created in 1944 by William Wyler for the Army Airforce. It told the story of the 25th and final mission of the crew of the Memphis Belle, a B-17 bomber heavily favored over Europe during World War II. We could make a packaging as simple as a single disk, dvd cover and dvd cover, but I wanted to do something different.

I made a “special edition” version.

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Twenty Three Title Sequence

Posted at July 23rd, 2007 in 3D, Motion, Typography, Work Journal | No Comments »

23 Title sequence
Ah, this is a little late, but I thought I would post it anyways. This is the final title sequence for a short film called “twenty three.”

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Consumeristic Pictotype.

Posted at May 17th, 2007 in Flash, Typography | No Comments »

On Erik Spiekermann’s blog, I found a link to something very interesting, called Amaztype. The site asks you to choose one of Amazon’s different databases, media type (book, cd, dvd, etc.), title or author and asks for a search term. What it then does is searches Amazon’s database for that word, gathering sample images and data when it finds it. Finally, the site generates the search term you entered using the media it found. Tis a rather fun and interesting page!

Aaron