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What Is Commercial Art? PDF Print E-mail
Wednesday, 06 January 2010 00:00

Ask two people to define commercial art and their answer will depend upon their age. The 50-something identifies commercial art as an ad for Camels designed by a frustrated painter toiling over a drafting board at a frenzied advertising agency. Young men and women are more likely to cite the flyer done by the desktop publisher in the next room, the award-winning billboard executed by the graphic artist down the hall or the guy responsible for the cool animation that ran during a Super Bowl commercial break. They are all correct. Examples of commercial art are everywhere. In terns of a definition, commercial art can be broadly described as creative work done for pay. The field has evolved at warp speed over the past half century, but one goal remains the same: professionals in this dynamic industry help marketers and advertisers grab the attention of an always-fickle public, then creatively persuade them to buy, buy, buy.

    History

  1. Sit through a history of art series and you'll eventually arrive at the 19th century where the arts and crafts movement emerged. Its mission? Prove to the public that art can be both beautiful and useful. William Morris, a school of arts and crafts founder, was but one of those who believed in and practiced the art of beautifying common things. Why run a newspaper ad featuring nothing but words? How about putting flowers on that tissue box? Wouldn't it be great if everything from magazines and brochures to food packages and road signs looked terrific while offering information? This thinking, a reflection of the world's growing desire to consume, formed the base of the movement known as commercial art.
  2. Function

  3. Making commercial art has become another transformational process. Before computers and software did most of the grunt work, commercial art was accomplished with pens, pencils, watercolors, T-squares, brayers and tools since relegated to commercial art museums. Professionals hand rendered and laid out every piece of advertising and marketing material on the planet. Had technology not stumbled along, these professionals might still be hunched over drafting boards. Fast forward fifty years. Not only has the name Commercial Art disappeared into the profession of Graphic Design, but amazing tools and methods have helped turn the profession into a colossus of sub-disciplines that literally affect everything we see and buy.
  4. Considerations

  5. Given the fact that commercial art transects industries and has spawned hundreds of sub-specialties, a professional requires expert understanding of the latest hard and softwares. A majority of commercial art is created on Macintosh rather than PC and, as such, software written to do the work tends to interface more efficiently on the Mac. At the top of the software food chain are page layout programs (InDesign, QuarkXpress are industry favorites), image manipulation programs (Adobe Photoshop is the industry standard), Dreamweaver and Front page for website design, Adobe Illustrator, a vector-based draw program and a variety of other sophisticated tools. For package and other 3D designers, CAD-based software is required. The proliferation of programs to help commercial artists do their job is huge and growing.
  6. Types

  7. The list is endless, but here are some examples of commercial art: print ads, website designs, product packaging, book illustrations, billboard layouts, TV storyboards, commercial signs, dust jackets, CD and DVD case and disk art, magazine covers, newspaper display ads, logos, catalogs, posters, bottles, cans, boxes, shopping bags, electronic displays, bus, cab and airplane ads, flyers, brochures, booklets, pamphlets, business letterhead, tickets, programs, marketing and sales presentation materials.
  8. Considerations

  9. From apprenticeships to internships and from graphic design positions to art directorships, the world of commercial art stands ready to welcome professionals. Whether one wishes to work for an agency serving the diverse needs of clients or a single employer driving that company's product, package, newsletter, ad and website projects, the field is packed with variety. If in-house work is too confining, plenty of freelance job opportunities abound.
  10. Potential

  11. Go into commercial art if you thrive on excitement, love creative challenges, adore working with other artsy types and exhibit great stamina during crises. Stay away from commercial art if you are prone to ulcers, can't cope with quick project turnarounds and compromise isn't in your vocabulary. Commercial artists work closely with sales and marketing teams in a corporate environment. As a rule, ad agencies and design studios offer the best salaries because clients are demanding and the work is intense. The biggest educational requirement for a commercial artist is keeping up-to-date on emerging softwares. Fall behind and you may wish to keep a career backup in mind.
By Gail Cohen

 

Last Updated ( Wednesday, 20 January 2010 09:10 )
 
Emerging Trends in Contemporary Australian Art PDF Print E-mail
Monday, 04 January 2010 00:00
For more than two years, a team of curators has sought out artists, new media workers and writers to map emerging trends in contemporary Australian art, cinema, video and digital media. The team found artists and writers talking about collaboration, community, obsolescence, waste and justice. The result is a partnership between two Victorian cultural institutions, with an incredible 150 art works in the NGV exhibition alone. Never before have so many works from such varied media come together in one exhibition in Australia.  2004 represents one of the most ambitious surveys of contemporary Australian art and culture in recent history.  2004 includes a substantial proportion of art and new media made outside Sydney and Melbourne with artists coming from every state and territory in Australia.  2004 is a major collaborative project between the NGV and ACMI, conceived to explore the breadth and diversity of visual culture as it is now being practised in Australia.

 

2004 - unbounded by media or thematic parameters - shows how artists, crafts workers, game-designers, networked media creators, architects and moving image makers are confronting rapid change in new and old media. It draws individual artists into creative dialogue with each other, with the public, and with our culture.

2004 is a provocative and surprising exhibition that will stimulate debate and discussion within the community about the changing nature of visual culture in Australia today. With a cross-generational selection of artists from all over Australia, the inclusion in  2004 of works across all art forms and media is unparalleled in any exhibition in this country. The audience will be inspired, intrigued, challenged and amazed by the diversity and brilliance of Australia's visual artists." Frances Lindsay, Deputy Director (Australian Art) National Gallery of Victoria

 
Showcase of Designs Optimized for iPhone PDF Print E-mail
Sunday, 01 November 2009 00:00

Over the last couple of years, mobile devices have managed to gain mainstream popularity. With iPhone, making mobile Web applications finally usable by broad masses, web design can now be applied to mobile applications as well. In this post we are focusing on designs that are specifically optimized for mobile devices, in particular iPhone.

Though iPhone’s Safari browser is able to render any website just like you would see it on a desktop browser, the available screen area is much smaller than in common “classic” displays. This poses a new challenge for designers and developers who now can reach millions of users that use mobile Web. Websites that are specifically optimized for the iPhone utilize the screen to the fullest extent, and use less bandwidth (which is necessary, because the connectivity is not always optimal).

The iPhone browsing experience is quite different than the regular browsing experience. The buttons and hyperlinks have to be bigger because our fingers are not as sharp as the mouse pointer. Optimizing a website for iPhone is not rocket science. It’s the same HTML, CSS and JavaScript that you already know. The only major difference is the screen size.

In the showcase below we present some of the interesting, interactive and beautiful designs that are optimized for the iPhone. You will also learn about some handy tools that will help you optimize your website for the iPhone.


1. News / Entertainment

Sevnth Sin
The unique navigation makes this site very interactive. Nice concept, nice colors.

 

Blip.tv
Perfectly suits the theme: video entertainment! Clean and clear typography.

 

NBC
The YouTube-style design makes it very easy to navigate and find shows.

 

Zinio
That’s a kit of magazines, all one-touch away!

 

Spin The Bottle
A simple bottle spinning game. Good use of graphics.

 

Daily Wallpaper
Similar to Zinio, but 2 thumbnails in a row make it more easy to navigate around.

 

AOL Horoscopes
Very well designed for a horoscope site. Matching color scheme throughout.

 

Yahoo Omg!
Fresh look, vibrant colors and lively typography make this design fun to browse and easy to read. The design also matches the celebrity gossip theme.

 

2. Business / Corporate

DPTO
Different tones of red make this design look very attractive on the iPhone. The 3D menu looks very nice — perfect for a marketing and design agency.

 

Mind Medium Creative
The use of gradients make the overall site look very shiny on the iPhone. The menu is very to-the-point. A nice composition and execution.

 

Redhawk Investment Advisors
This design has a very corporate feel to it. Good use of colors.

 

Nike Lab
Just what to expect from Nike. Sporty and energetic design.

 

Procab Studio
Procab studio showcases their work portfolio and other information about the agency. Well placed content. The font size is a bit too small, though.

 

Hotel Monterilla
The design makes you want to go there for a vacation. The design has a very comforting feel to it. A perfect color scheme.

 

Viget Labs
A blue background, appropriate padding and rounded corners make this simple design look vibrant and attractive.

 

Batali Associates
This is one of the good examples of design optimization for the iPhone. It clearly looks like it was really made for the iPhone, not just duplicated.

 

Ready For iPhone
A company that provides iPhone optimized website solutions. The finger on the “Go” looks intuitive.

 

Element Fusion
Another showcase website that provides design services. Looks like a cut-down version of the actual website.

 

Volkswagon
A showcase gallery for Volkswagon. Easy to navigate around. Clean and clear content.

 

3. Shopping / E-Commerce

Torn Robes
A nice example of a mobile e-Commerce site. Just touch your favourite design, have a look at it and buy it. Looks very vibrant.

 

Coosh
A single-product e-Commerce site. Branded very well.

 

Walmart
This design doesn’t really meet the expectations from WalMart — however, the design is still in beta. The usability is good, though: it is very easy to search for products and stores. You can also create shopping lists.

 

 

4. Portfolio / Blog

World Ending Blog (Japanese)
Although we did not understand a word there, it is very well designed for the iPhone. Every page is optimized and provides a good browsing experience.


 

Signal Element
Simple and clean design: just 3 pages, but very well designed.


 

One Crimson Splash
This is the portfolio of James Finley. The choice of colors and content placement are very good.

 

5. Education / Content

MIT
What else to expect from MIT? Simple, clean, user-friendly.

 

101 Cook Books
Not really a fancy design, but it’s the simplicity and clarity of content that makes it appear in this showcase.

 

Please Fix The iPhone
A good design that provides the desktop browsing experience. It is very easy to find what you are looking for.

 

1881
The Norwegian telephone directory online. The combination of bright blue, orange and white looks really good.

 

AOL Food
Heaven for those who love to cook. Just keep your iPhone with you in the kitchen, and let this nice design help you make a delicious dinner.

 

Deviant Art
A nice way to browse art on the iPhone. The color scheme is good, and it makes the artwork look prominent. Very easy to navigate and search. Also, appropriately sized thumbnails.

 

Tools to design a website for iPhone

There are some libraries and kits available to help you iPhoneize your design.

  • iPhoney
    iPhoney gives you a pixel-accurate web browsing environment—powered by Safari—that you can use when developing web sites for iPhone. It’s a perfect tool to see how your web creations will look on iPhone.
  • Test iPhone
    A web browser based simulator for quickly testing your iPhone web designs.
  • iWebKit (Demo)
    iWebKit is a file package designed to help you create your own iPhone and iPod Touch compatible website or webapp. Comes with various ready-to-use themes.
  • iUI
    iUI is a framework consisting of a JavaScript library, CSS, and images for developing iPhone web designs. It makes your web designs look and feel like iPhone’s native applications.
  • Intersquash (Demo)
    Not really a helpful tool for designing, but you can instantly create an iPhone compatible site from your RSS feed url.
  • WPtouch
    For WordPress users: WPtouch transforms your WordPress blog into an iPhone application-style theme, complete with ajax loading articles and effects, when viewed from an iPhone or iPod touch.
  • Jaipho Gallery (Demo)
    If your website features a photo gallery, Jaipho will optimize it for iPhone users.

Further Resources

Don’t stop here. Check out these other great tutorials and guidelines.


take a look at the original article at the link: http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2009/09/27/showcase-of-designs-optimized-for-iphone/
 
Global Web Statistics - W3Counter PDF Print E-mail
Saturday, 24 October 2009 00:00
Web Browsers
1 Internet Explorer 7.0 22.99%
2 Firefox 3.0 17.08%
3 Internet Explorer 8.0 15.33%
4 Internet Explorer 6.0 14.04%
5 Firefox 3.5 13.35%
6 Safari 4.0 3.66%
7 Chrome 2.0 3.23%
8 Firefox 2.0 1.43%
9 Opera 9.6 1.19%
10 Safari 3.2 0.69%
Operating Systems
1 Windows XP 60.55%
2 Windows Vista 22.64%
3 Mac OS X 7.11%
4 Linux 1.97%
5 Windows 7 1.69%
6 Windows 2000 0.78%
7 Windows 2003 0.65%
8 iPhone OSX 0.40%
9 Windows 98 0.13%
10 WAP 0.07%
Countries
1 United States 29.09%
2 Germany 4.80%
3 United Kingdom 4.57%
4 Brazil 4.06%
5 Turkey 3.01%
6 Canada 2.84%
7 Spain 2.70%
8 Italy 2.53%
9 Netherlands 2.50%
10 India 2.45%
Screen Resolutions
1 1024x768 31.02%
2 1280x800 20.36%
3 1280x1024 11.74%
4 1440x900 8.68%
5 1680x1050 5.81%
6 800x600 4.66%
7 1152x864 2.70%
8 1920x1200 2.01%
9 1366x768 1.81%
10 1280x768 1.58%
 
Cross-Browser Compatibility Checking PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 23 October 2009 00:00

We all know the importance of checking our web pages with multiple browsers, especially when we are designing a new layout for a website. This is the case even if we are writing validated standards-compliant code. The number of extant browsers we need to check with are enormous: Internet Explorer (IE) 7, 6, 5.5 and 5.0, Firefox 2.0 and 1.5, Opera 9 and 8, and so on. And then there are the different platforms: Windows, Macintosh (Mac), Linux, etc. The problem for most people is that multiple versions of certain browsers cannot co-exist with each other, the most notable example of this is IE for Windows. Unless you are privileged to have multiple computers, this presents a certain difficulty for the average webmaster. This article suggests some ways for you to run multiple versions of multiple browsers on one computer.

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