My favorite stock site has released an wonderfully clear and simple infographic on the 2013 design trends from their perspective.
My favorite stock site has released an wonderfully clear and simple infographic on the 2013 design trends from their perspective.
Photoshop and Illustrator are forever open on my computer, and yet I am a big proponent of doing as much design as possible directly in PowerPoint. Very often, adding an effect or editing an image in PowerPoint is actually quicker than doing the same in Photoshop. And even more importantly, effects created natively in PowerPoint are almost always non-destructive, which means adjustments are far easier as presentation content continually shifts (because it always does…)
One of my favorite techniques in PowerPoint is to place a semi-transparent gradient box over full-page imagery. This is a way of “editing” the photo to make it fade out on an edge or to reduce the opacity over a part of the image and to allow for the placement of text on top of it.
Continue reading the entire post at Indezine.com…
Edelman hosted a VizThinkNYC event on Tuesday with toy designer Diana Vasquez. And we made toys!
More pics below the fold…
How do you make a presentation’s imagery consistent when pulling that imagery from multiple sources?
An old trick is to apply a consistent effect to all the imagery like turning it black and white or creating duotones.
But in a presentation we created last week, one of my designers was even more careful when composing collages. She made sure that the image subjects physically worked together, and I loved how they turned out: The orbital rings overlayed on the woman’s head…the Great Wall melting into the UN dais.
Awesome job, Carinda! Here are a couple of the slides from that presentation.
It’s easy to be dismissive of new branding or a tweaked logo—so haters go ahead and hate—but I love Twitter’s new logo.
It’s a study in simplification all around. The best logo designers know it’s not what you add, but what you take away.
Read about the design and thinking behind it here.