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- How to Rescue Your Graphic Design
Project When All Else Fails
-
- BY DALI BAHAT
- Internationally recognized
graphic designer, and President of Master Design
-
- 10 tips to surefire do-it-yourself
graphic design, for business executives who want professional-looking
results without the hassles
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- Whether you're giving a critical
sales presentation to a client, producing visuals for a meeting,
event, trade show or seminar, or unveiling the new company logo
before an audience of shareholders, top-notch graphics will help
ensure that you, your products, and your message receive the
attention they deserve.
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- Yet when you decide to do
the graphics in-house to reduce turnaround time or cut expenses,
those logos, photos, charts, graphs, pictures, timelines, illustrations,
etc. can be a source of frustration, embarrassment, stress and
perhaps lost business. Following ten simple tips to surefire
do-it-yourself graphic design, however, will help maximize your
visual punch, minimize your mistakes, and give you the professional-look
your graphics deserve. Not to mention, cut down on the headaches.
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- #1 Take a deep breath
Especially if you have a key presentation looming that needs
charts, graphs, and visuals and all you have are loose papers
and a migraine, first take a deep breath. Put on a fresh pot
of coffee. Clear your workspace. Handle those last minute telephone
calls. In short, you are going to need to focus your attention
on your design project, so prepare yourself. Youre about
to solve your graphic design problem in classic, do-it-yourself
fashion.
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- #2 Outline your project
Make a simple list of the presentation graphics you think youll
need. Dont get into details at this point. For example,
you might list: opening-- photo of young couple with product
and company logo; midpoint-- new market piechart and bar graph
of financial growth; close-- photo of new satisfied customer
using product. You just want to create a rough outline that can
help steer you through the project.
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- #3 Define what youre
trying to say
To keep your audience visually interested you must keep things
simple and avoid clutter that will confuse your focus.
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- Communicate one concept
at a time with your graphics. Your message can contain various parts, but your
communication as a whole must concentrate on the key concept
you want to get across. To shoot for more is to court disaster.
At all costs, avoid making everything important, as thats
the surest way to create visual anarchy. When you attempt to
give great importance to more than one message (or visual item),
you introduce confusion and succeed only in dispersing the viewer¹s
attention instead of directing it where you want it.
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- #4 Keep it simple
Visually, simple is better than complex, especially when images
will only be seen a short time. Avoid the complex since it obscures
your message rather than clarifies it.
Use pictures, illustrations,
graphs, etc. to punch up an important point, and to make complex
ideas simple. However,
avoid literally mimicking whats said in the text. The graphics
must enhance and play on variations of the text to make it more
interesting but never stray from the spirit of the message. At
their best, graphics add humor, emotion, reality, believability,
and playfulness to help bring about understanding and agreement
in viewers.
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- Keep text simple and readable,
without overdoing emphasis.
Use changes of size, style, color, and position, including bullets,
symbols and other devices to highlight and organize your text
in moderation. To avoid distracting the reader, limit the number
of fonts to two or three in no more than three or four readable
sizes. Keep the background simple, and use contrast to ensure
legibility. Contrast is the noticeable difference between things,
and can be as simple as bolding or underlining text in some cases.
But dont fill every bit of empty space, as
well-chosen space can serve to frame graphic elements
you may want to emphasize.
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- #5 Lay out your type, graphics,
and photos
Look at how the elements blend together. Lay out the type, graphics,
photos, etc. in rough format similar to how they will be presented.
If you know how, use computer formatting on programs such as
MS Word or Excel to experiment with layout. Or you may want to
lay out the physical materials on a desk or conference table.
Similarly, you may want to tape or pin them to a wall or cubicle
to see how vertical display affects their visual impact.
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- Now, heres where a little
strategic thinking can set your graphic design work apart from
the norm:
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- Visually group graphics
to show similarity and build interest. Try to visually group objects using similarities
of theme, color, direction, position, alignment, etc. Show what
goes with what, so your viewers will draw the proper conclusions.
For example, a picture of worn-out old shoes could depict a potential
clients current database management system (DBS), and brand
new track cleats could depict your DBS product. Of course, things
that belong together must have characteristics in common, and
must be similar enough to be perceived as a group or set.
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- Also, make visual order part
of your message. For example, decide WHEN the viewer should notice
your logo: Before reading the copy? After reading the headline?
Should the viewer note your company name before or after the
product youre selling? These strategic distinctions can
boost or detract both from your credibility and ability to persuade.
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- #6 Add emphasis with a
little color and contrast
The graphics of your piece must be easily seen and attract more
attention than anything around it. If not, your audience's attention
will go elsewhere: to a competitors ad, booth, flyer, banner,
etc. To improve the odds of getting your audience's attention,
use color and contrast in moderation to create interest. Remember
to use emphasis sparingly, like spice in cooking, because a little
goes a long ways but too much simply overpowers.
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- That said, attention does
gravitate toward the area of greatest contrast. (Thats
why print is usually black-on-white, which makes the letters
stand out for easier viewing, instead of say, black-on-brown).
For example, in a visual ad or billboard, a single sentence on
an otherwise empty page demands attention. You can't help but
read it. Other examples of good, eye-catching contrast: a white
spotlight in a dark theater; a 3-D object jutting out of a flat
wall; a moving object among motionless ones (or a stationary
object among moving ones); and a bright, colorful poster over
a dull, monochrome background. Similarly, at a trade show you'd
want your signage to run horizontally if you're competitors'
signs run vertically. In each case, your audience is visually
attracted toward what stands out or offers contrast.
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- Here are a few types of useful
contrast to consider using in your graphics: large/small, light/dark, flat/3-D, high/low,
short/long, strong/weak, smooth/course, one/many, full/empty,
warm/cool (colors), before/after, complex/simple, straight/winding,
round/angular, continuous/interrupted, horizontal/vertical/diagonal,
etc.
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- For a series of visuals,
use contrasting sequences to build interest as well. Contrasting sequences such as before/after,
young/old, or gradations of color can guide and build the viewers
interest by suggesting degrees of importance, recognizable patterns,
or consequences. When establishing what the viewer should notice
first, second, third, etc., control the order in which he perceives
the various items, using a scale of contrasts from most different
to most similar. The greater the contrast, the more importance
a visual item is given.
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- #7 Get a fresh perspective
After focusing on your graphics project, it helps to get a fresh
perspective. Ideally, you should ask someone with art or design
experience a few questions. How do these graphics strike you?
Do they support the message? What would you change? The less
they know about your presentation, company, or product the more
helpful their opinion, as it will more closely approximate your
audiences reaction. But really, anyones opinion helps
to pinpoint strengths and weaknesses in your designs, so dont
be afraid to ask. And dont be afraid to accept criticism.
If no one is available, take a break from your project if at
all possible, so you can approach your graphic project with fresher,
less biased eyes.
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- #8 Put on the finishing
touches
Then adjust your graphics project according to the objective
feedback you received. Heres where you may brighten or
lighten colors, change font sizes, or rearrange graphics for
better overall layout.
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- Also, round out your pictures
and graphics with carefully chosen words. From caption to headline and story,
words are a critical part of the message youre visually
communi-cating, so they must be chosen and arranged carefully
for the whole to work. Include only whats important, so
as not to dilute your carefully crafted message.
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- Along these lines, speak your
viewers language in a way that addresses their problems
and answers their needs. For example, if your picture shows a
healthy Mr. Jones tussling with grandkids after successful bypass
surgery, mention how your new medical product reduced recovery
time to three weeks from the normal three months.
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- #9 Take one last look
No matter how careful you are theres always last minute
mistakes to catch: misspelled words, misaligned margins, or graphics
that still need to be rearranged to lessen distracting white
or trapped space. Use spell and grammar checkers, then print
out sample copies to test overall visual effect until youre
satisfied with the results.
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- #10 Print out and mount
your final presentation
Since all your previous work counts for naught if the final graphic
product isnt displayed and mounted properly, its
critical to prevent the wrinkling, bubbling, warping, and peeling
that can sink an otherwise impeccable graphic presentation. To
this end, I have long used and recommended Pres-On products.
Well known amongst professional graphic artists and photographers,
Pres-On has a broad line of do-it-yourself, self-stick mounting
board products for just about every application. Ive mounted
everything from extremely large oversize prints like architectural
renderings and giant logos, to small decorative items, and consistently
Pres-On mounting products makes it very easy to do and gives
me professional results.
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- Their newest mounting product
Score & Snap, is made of a thin, surprisingly strong, plastic
material thats coated with self-stick mounting adhesive.
It was designed to mount logos, photos, charts, signs and other
graphics quickly and easily, with the capability to correct mistakes,
but with subsequent permanent positioning. Once a graphic is
mounted, the protective plastic can be easily scored with an
X-Acto knife, then snapped off into the desired shape. Because
of the consistency of the plastic material, its versatility in
positioning graphics, and its clean edges, it makes it easy to
produce a spectacular looking finished product that wont
come undone at the worst possible moment.
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- With a firm grip on your graphics
project, you can now look forward to the presentation deadline
without knots in your stomach. Who knows, with the knockout graphics
you cranked out, on a shoestring budget to boot, you could be
in line for a promotion. As a parting tip, ask for a raise, as
youve just added polished graphic presentation to your
list of job skills. Just keep your Graphic Design Rescue Tips
handy because the next project might not be so easy.
_______________________________________
Author:
- Call Dali Bahat at (818) 765-6635
or email at ot_artist@earthlink.net for more information about
Master Design. For more information on Pres-On Score &
Snap, and other Pres-On Self-Stick adhesive mounting products
contact Pres-On Corp. at 21 Factory Road, Addison, Illinois 60101;
Phone (800) 323-1745; Fax (888) 543-9406; www.Pres-On.com.
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