lianne elliott's portfolio

44

Upload: lianne-elliott

Post on 08-Mar-2016

223 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

DESCRIPTION

Lianne Elliott's design portfolio as of summer 2013.

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 2: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

LIANNE M [email protected]

OBJECTIVE: To gain a job in the field of graphic design where I can continue to expand my creative knowlege in a work enviornment that promotes good design and creative thinking.

EDUCATION: SKILLS:South Fork High School -Graduated in 2009 with high school diplomaFlagler College -Graduated in 2013 with Bachelor’s in Graphic Design, minoring in psychology and advertising

EMPLOYMENT:The Y Drive-Thru -Worked as a waitress and cashier the summer of 2009Ann Taylor LOFT -Worked as a sale associate and cashier for Ann Taylor LOFT Outlet from 2011-2012

Adobe Photoshop - CS6

Adobe Illustrator - CS6

Adobe InDesign - CS6

Microsoft Word

Microsoft Excel

AWARDS:Korean War Veterans Association JROTC Award -Awarded in 2006 for leadership excellenceNational Sojourners Award -Awarded in 2009 for leadership excellence

Lianne is a designer who prefers to design simply and thoughtfully. She seeks to apply her psychology knowlegde to design in every way she can. She looks forward to seeing her dog every day and having dinner with her fiance. She also likes video games and fantasy novels.

Every challenge is just an opportunity for

personal and creative growth.

“ “

Page 3: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 4: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 5: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Ronald McDonald

House Charities

Page 6: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 7: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Ronald McDonald House Charities has been helping families stay together through hard times for 39 years, but they never run out of people who need help. These pamphlets are meant to help them. One focuses on who the organization is and they believe in. It’s full of information about the charity’s mission and values. The other focuses on what RMHC actively does for their community and the families who rely on them. It discusses the different programs that the charity runs and funds. Attached to each of these pamplets is a donation form, where they can send cash or charge their cards in order to donate to the organization in one form or another. The pamphlets would be distributed in hospital waiting rooms. After reading about the excellence of this charity, people will be more inclined to donate or prehaps volunteer.

Page 8: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Knights Inn

Page 9: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 10: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 11: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Knights Inn hotels are inexpensive and family friendly, shouldn’t their branding be the same? This design for hotel toiletries is fun for children and adults. Each item carries the wall element of their logo, tying it back to company. They also display icons of a knight character that children may identify more easily with due to his whimsical nature.

The knight icons features a knight’s helm embracing the hotel’s products. We see him with a bathing cap or a shined up helmet or just trying to get some shut eye. By personifying the helm, children will feel more comfortable and at ease in the hotels. Maybe they’ll even want to take a bath. Adults are invited back to the party through the use of strong, “grown-up” typography.

Page 12: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Alliance Tire

Page 13: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 14: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Alliance Tire Company sells quality tires for tractors and other farm equipment. Their indentity needed to reflect their agricultural roots along with the quality of their tires. The tire is placed at the bicep of the arm as the muscle. This represents the strength and durability of their product, while indentifying with the typically male farmers who are no strangers to hard work. The green color is a reminder of grass and of the crops that the tires help harvest. The tire tread element is also meant to be a reminder of farm life. Brown accompanies the green throughout the identity package as a reminder of the dirt plants grown in. The letterhead and envelope embody this the most. The business card is a mimick of a tire pressure gauge. The card portion can slide freely, just like a real gauge. It can also be removed, if needed. Overall, the identity package reflects the company’s roots and the strength of their products.

Page 15: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 16: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 17: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Comet

Page 18: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Comet cleaner has looked the same since I was born in 1991. The familiar green was a favorite cleaner, but also prone to messiness as it didn’t have a lid. This new design uses a lid much like a baby power bottle that can lock and prevent spillage. The design of the labels themsevles have also gotten a facelift. The comet has been reduced to a simple yellow stroke with a character riding on it as the star. Her name is Josephine, taken from a popular character in Comet’s earlier advertising commercials. She’s an upbeat young woman who better represents the modern woman.

Page 19: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 20: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

CVS

Page 21: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 22: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

CVS Pharmacy needed a store-brand medication make-over. The main priority was to make sure that customers knew what was in their pills, what they were for and how they would br affected. Each box shows in large letters what the medication is for (such as sleep aid) and then a description of what the medication does in red letters underneath. The boxes also show icons as to if the medication would make the user drowsy. There are also images of what the pills look like, so you always know what you’re getting. CVS is known for being trusted and this design reinforces that trust by telling the customer everything up front and simply.

Page 23: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

The icon system in the design is very simple.

For drowsy medications, the design shows a closed eye surrounded by peaceful clouds, much like the moon on a beautiful night.

For non-drowsy medications, the eye is open with sunbursts coming out of it, mimicking the sun.

Page 24: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Greyhound

Page 25: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 26: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 27: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Greyhound’s main issue is that people don’t want to take buses for long trips any longer. They feel like they can’t get the same comforts from as bus as they can with a plane or even a train. Now that can change. With the introduction of comfort items such as blankets, pillows and snacks, people can ride in style and comfort.

Page 28: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Lindner Feed

Page 29: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 30: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

The Lindner Feed and Milling company’s logo needed some help appearing more professional to their clients. Shying away from Texas-shaped gradient they were currently using, I sought to create something that would remind people who Lindner feeds. I also wanted something distinctly agricultural. The drawing of the pig is to emulate an illustration style commonly found on bag of feed from local feed stores around the nation. The diamond shape is a reminder of the signs feed stores and farms have. Combined with a no-nonsense serif and corperate sans serif, this logo is understood as a swine feed company ready to be taken seriously.

Page 31: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 32: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 33: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Flagler Athletics

Page 34: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

The Flagler College athletics department is always looking for new recruits to help them to win victories over their rivals and promote a general sense of school spirit. In order to inspire students to join athletics teams, the following package was devised. There would be a shirt (also for sale at the campus store), a football shaped stress ball and a penndent to show support for Flagler. This package would be mailed out to or be distributed to potential atheletes in order to promote positive feelings about Flagler as a school and Flagler as a place to display their talents.

The designs follow a typical college theme. Typography includes a “dueling-banjos” senerio, with the cursive and serifed typefaces playing againest each other to achieve a perfect harmony. The designs are also mostly distressed, to give each design that old familiar feeling of your favorite shirt or jeans.

Page 35: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 36: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 37: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

The Dresden Files

Page 38: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

The Dresden Files by Jim Butcher is a noir-like series of novels about a wizard trying to make a living as a P.I. in modern day Chicago. The books, in a word, are addicting. Many fans of the series recalled being sucked into the books within the first few chapters. This seemed to be a problem. I set out to get them sucked in with just a cover. The project began with completely rereading the series. The covers were meant to look great above all, but also include enough elements of the plot to

be relevent without giving away any of the books’ twists. The result was a set of book jackets that reflected the series’ modern noir theme with each individual cover hinting to the main plot of each book. All of the covers are unified with the Chicago cityscape and a symbol of importance of the main character (the pentacle necklace that once belonged to his mother). Overall, the book jackets well represent the feel of the series and the books, making it a successful redesign.

Page 39: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 40: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Caveman Typeface

Page 41: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 42: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Caveman is a typeface in both the Roman and Armenian alphabets. Displaying sturdy slab serifs, this typeface can take on the touchest jobs. Beginning with intensive research, Cave got its first start in Armenian. Paying careful study to the creation of the Armenian alphabet, each letterform echoes the strong historical ties that the Armenian culture is proud of. The Armenian characters are more typical of classical orthography and “iron lettering”, which was used to teach the alphabet after its creation in 405 c.e.

Caveman’s Roman brother features the same strong weight and reliable serifs. Caveman is as easily legible from a distance as it is up close, making it a prime choice for designers in need of making a bold statement.

Page 43: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio
Page 44: Lianne Elliott's Portfolio

Everything’s real shiny, Captain