Monday, July 30, 2012

Postor




     These are my posters for my project presentation. When I was designing this poster I wanted to keep it as hand crafted as possible, keeping the human craft evident. Next time I design a poster I will make sure to make the underlining grid more visible and the elements of the posters more lined up. All in all, make this poster has helped me remember what I wanted to accomplish with this project, what the message I wanted to convey with the model. When I was drawing my technical drawing I ran out of velum paper and had pens that where drying out. I wish I would have seen this coming because mixing velum and tracing paper on a presentation poster does not look clean and having broken pen line does not look professional. A great skill I learned from working on this project was how to work with color pencils.  They where never a media I payed much attenuation to, but coloring my perspective with it was quiet interesting. I learned that using complementary colors can create a deeper shadow and how to make the transition from light to dark. This project called for me use all the skills I learned in ID 103 from drafting to organization. This project was something I needed to do to make sure I knew and could use all I have learned.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Sketch Reflection


Final Model















These are picture of my final project model. I took them around 12pm to see how the shade and shadow plays off the structure. The overall model has an interesting form, but their is one thing I would like to change about this design. That one thing is the design of the setting structure. It seem to distract from what is really impotent in the model, the flow and relaxing horizontal elements. All an all, I like the design I could not have wished for a better one.

Sketch 10



For this post I wanted to try a new medium. They are Sakura pen touch pens in white, sliver, and gold. The two point perspective seems a bit distorted because I made the VP point to high.

Drawing

 The other day I drew my hand holding a piece of paper. It was interesting to see how the shade and shadow looks like on my hand. 

This chair was drawn with a two point perspective. I used the pencil hand measuring to help make the image less distorted.

This was a fast drawing done of my nee and foot with a pen.

This two point perspective of a lamp in the engineering building at WSU.

Sunday, July 22, 2012

Sketch 9, Shading a Two-Point space



     This image is of a corner in my living room. It was a cloudy day that day and the shadows that where being chased created an interesting look on the walls. I found that when trying to create many different types shades and shadows in a small space, it helps to smug them a little. It creates a good transition for the different shads of shadows.

Uris Giron

Sketch 8, One-point Perspective

     This was a perspective done of a sidewalk of down town Pullman. It was done free handed as you can see. I can see that I made the one-point perspective two slanted downwards, this squad the images' believably for a realistic space. I will watch out for that next time. I used markers to color the space. I hope to learn how to use these markers better in the future. They are a bit tricky but Ill get it.

Uris Giron


Sketch 7, Pen vs Pencil

 The image to left is drawn and shaded with pen, compared to the one to the right which is drawn with pencil. The image to the right seems more believable for a space compared to the other. Even the one-point perspective seems more accurate. I did erase with the pencil, it is a more forgiving medium then pen, pens for life. If I was to go back and do it again with the pen I would have used drafting style of drawing, Hit-Go-Hit, I did do a little of that style of drawing with the right image to test it out. It is a great way to draw good, clean straight lines.

Uris Giron

Tuesday, July 17, 2012

Concept Model


These images are of my concept model for my project. This composition took me some time to 
design, but I feel content about it. I wanted this abstraction to have free flowing elements.
As well as a geometric shape and an emphases through  the use of colors. I feel that this model captures the  abstract design I wanted to give it. The design is similar to the way the artist I am 
studying, would abstract a project (Milton Stricker) in my opinion. 
Top


     I wanted each different view of this abstraction to call attentions to a different element and principle of design. One can see how the free flowing lines are visible from the top view of this image, how the diagonal elements are affecting the composition and interception the fluid look of this design. 


Side


From this view one can see how nonobjective it is even though it was 
abstracted from a piece of wood.
the color scheme of this abstraction is quiet pleasant to the eyes, it is a split complementary with red and green, and it also uses different hues of those colors.

 Front


     Now I ask you a question, readers. In what climate can you see this abstraction in?

     Similar to what Milton Stricker believed, he thinks that each type of abstraction belongs in a particular location. More geomatric abstraction belonged in hot climantes where more free flowing lines belong in mild climates  

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

3-D Models

     This is an image of my organic object of a piece of wood.
     These 3-D abstractions are from my first abstract sketch seen on my last blog post ORGANIC ABSTRACTION. For the first one on the left I extruded the pattern from the 2-D to 3-D to give it the illusion of still being 2-d if seen from a plan view. Then I adjusted the angles that the pieces were in to give the object a more dynamic look, I did this from all of these abstractions for this sketch. I took that dynamic look to an extreme for the one in the front right corner. It created an interesting object, but it seem like to much chaos. Then for the one in the middle back,  I when back into extruding the object but giving it an organic curve that the pieces were connected to. I like the composition of this one, it may come in handy for my final design.  


     These two abstraction are of my last two sketches from my ORGANIC ABSTRACTION post. They are both similar in the sense that they both have strong horizontal elements.  the top one is more fluid and the bottom one is more geometric, both seem good in their own way. I like the more fluid 3-D abstractions' free flowing look, but I also like the more geometric ones' order and balance they they carry. My next step is to make some 3-D abstractions with all three sketches, combining some elements with others.
These bottom three abstractions are a combination of all three sketches. I will be working more on a better composition of all of their similar elements. I want to keep in mind the strong diagonal and horizontal elements that my artist has in his work for my abstractions. 



Photoshop Room


This was an interesting assignment for me to work on, we turned a 2-dimensional sketch of a 1-point perspective into a an interesting space with a some what believable room. This project was know small feet, I had to use many different tools to make this room, as well as many different images. But to tell you the truth, it was a lot of work, but not really that hard if one was to look at it one step at a time. Like I said before it was not hard just a lot of work. 

I made this assignment a little be hard on my self because I did not work more on developing what I wanted the space to look like. I worked a little on my thumbnail sketch, but I should have put more time into them. In the end I the assignment was completed, I just need to remember to develop my vision more in the future.

Uris Giron

Saturday, July 7, 2012

Drawing Details

     This diagram is of a chair in my studio class. I think it cam out well but I need to work on some of my perspective views you can see this in the legs of my chair.

The Designer on the Go, The Real Way to Design


     This drawing was done on a napkin with a flair pen. The floor plan is of my house by downtown Pullman in Washington. and the one-point perspective is of my living room. I placed a little indicator on my floor plane to show where the one-point perspective is from.My perspective is a bit off, you can tell because of my secant chair.

    I would draw on napkins when the waiters are taking forever at restaurants. It is hard to not rip the napkin but I'm getting better. 

Organic Abstraction

     The image above is of a piece of wood I found on my walk home from class. For a few days I was working on abstracting this piece of wood in a similar manner that the artist I researched would, Milton Stricker, for my 103 Interior Design class.  I made about 60 abstractions of this piece of wood, when was was abstracting it, I kept in mind two quotes of my artist, Milton Stricker. One of them was
       "The final design test: is the building beautiful, in harmony
        with its surrounding, and does it fiction well?"
Milton Stricker,
and the other quote was
       "Organic design is compounded of a multiple of the abstracted design elements
        and then reunified into a new dimension defining art, structure, and human values."
Milton Stricker,
 
     Keeping in mind these quotes, I believe helped keep my abstraction down a similar road to my artist style of abstracting. I  chose 3 of the 60 abstraction to work on further in my design process, to create some 3-dimensional abstractions.

     The following abstractions are a combination of many of my earlier abstractions I worked on. Then I reflected on them to come up with these 3 more developed abstractions. 
  
     This abstraction has many similar elements to my artist. I used red and green hues, strong vertical, and diagonal elements, and patterneds influenced by the shape of the piece of wood.

The pattern is similar to Milton Strickers' Taliesin West Abstraction.    









     This abstraction has strong horizontal elements with free flowing lines. The white void space complements the different hues of green and red, as well as the black bordering lines. It has similar elements to the abstraction below.

This abstraction is similar to Milton Strickers' abstraction of Mount Saint Helens.









     The abstraction has horizontal, diagonal, nonobjective, rhythm elements, and emphasis through the use of color. It gives a calm, relaxing look, and it has a complementary color scheme and different hues of those colors.












I hope to narrow down these abstraction to one or even a combination of all three, with my 3-D design phases.

Uris Giron

Monday, July 2, 2012

Patterns within a Pattern

     Patterns within a pattern, that's a deep thought to think about, but I gave it a go with this image above. The image was created on Photoshop, I used an already made pattern, just a simple two shade pattern and modified its shape to what I wanted it to look like. I wanted to include seven images in my pattern from my  Elements and Principles of Design  posters I made a few days ago. 

Can you tell me what images I used? 
     
     So I made sure I picked my spaces carefully. I made this images' color composition a tetradic one. The colors seemed to express the culture I researched for my E and P design posters.  

Uris Giron

Sunday, July 1, 2012

Shade and Shadow

      The image to the right does not have velum on it, the one on the left does. I was studying the shadow of the arm bar, to see how it's shadow is cast on a set of stares. As one can see on the image to the left, how shade and shadow are two different things. Shadow being the darker space then the shade.
    I should have used a darker pencil for this piece of velum. the shadow can barely bee seen.

Uris Giron

Fruit in SPACE


     This painting was done with gouache paint. I used Light Green, Yellow, and purple to create a split complementary composition. I used the black shadow to place more attention to the other colors, an accent color. The small contour lines were done to give the image a more recognizable shape.


Uris Giron

Milton Stricker

This poster was made to inform the viewer about Milton Stricker, an architect in Seattle Washington. He was an architect that to this day, amazes me with his story of how he became an architect and how he finally capture his creativity. His views on many things are similar to mine. As an early designer, he always wanted to know how an artist can call upon their creativity. This is a question I ask myself every day, well I think every artist as themselves this question. when he attended Carnegie Hall for architecture, he came up with this conclusion,
        Art is an Abstraction
        Architecture is an Art
        Architecture is an Abstraction
                                     Milton Stricker
This makes logical sense, this view of what architecture was to him at this time was taboo, during his early years of architecture school most of the professors wanted their student to design in a box. He said that most of the best project in his classes looked like a box. He did not let this discourage him on his views of architecture as an abstraction. In his last semester for architecture school, Milton dropped out of school to join Frank Lloyd Wright's fellowship program. He went to Taliesin West in Arizona to plead to Mr. Wright asking him to let him join his fellowship. He said no at first but then let him in free of charge for a year. He was finally given a chance to practice his abstract architecture. This leaded him to his style of architecture that is similar to Mr. Wright's "Nature through Abstraction". He became a great architect that never stopped learning his craft and only became better and better with time.

   This man got me interested in design through abstraction. He is a person I wish I could have met before he passed. He seemed like a great man that has truly become happy with his craft. I hope one day to discover my style of design and share it with the world.    

   
Uris Giron

Elements and Principles of Design


       The Elements and Principles of Design, this was a fun poster to put together. I was given the chance to look at these concepts again. It is always good to go back to the foundations of design. I can honestly say that I have forgotten about some of these concepts before when it came to designing a project, but making this poster, I think, will help me remember them when I need to use them. For my most recent project, I made sure to run it throw all the elements and principles of design to get a greater understating of what the object really was that I was looking at.
 
       I used the colors blue and orange, because they are complementary colors. The blue gives the viewer a calming feeling when the orange makes the viewer more alert. I made the colors run vertical because I think that it would make the viewers more attentive to the information that was on the posters.

Uris Giron