Journal of David Atlee @ Frozen Designs

David Atlee designs and builds websites, takes photos, plays with digital design and writes stories about odd things.
 
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    Symmetry 101 – Part 1 – Simple Symmetry, Arrays and Reflection

    Tuesday, March 16th, 2010

    Right, Ladies and Gentleman. I am about to embark on a symmetry blogging journey. Why you ask? Well, let me tell you. Firstly it always good to share knowledge and without numerous blogs I would not have half the skills I have today. Secondly it will help me get a better understanding of this aspect I generally took for granted in design. It is very easy to read and research, but think back to school and college (assuming your not still there), to help knowledge and understanding really stick in your head, you have to put the theory into practise.

    I recently discovered a book called ‘Symmetry, The Ordering Principle‘ by David Wade and so whilst I work through each chapter I am going to take that knowledge in to Illustrator, design something, then post the design and the things I learned here for others to read. So lets hope I understand it correctly, if you find mistakes please feel free to email me or comment so that I can correct my mistakes and improve my learning and in-turn others.

    Simple Symmetry

    The first two keywords of symmetry are Congruence and Periodicity. Congruence according to wikipedia is ‘the regular disposition of elements and Periodicity meaning ‘occuring at regular intervals’. Pretty much most symmetry needs these and without them you lose the symmetry.

    Below is my base image that I am going to make into a symmetrical design. You recognise it as half of a bad guys space fighter from a popular sci-fi film.

    My basic shape, half a tie-fighter.

    The basic image of the design, half a tie-fighter

    If I add duplicates of the image with Congruence and Periodicity as guidelines you can get the most basic of symmetry with a repeating image as shown below.

    Basic Symmetry, a repeating image

    Basic Symmetry, a repeating image

    If a duplicate is added say at different sizes, angles and spacing, then it is known as’ similar’, you can see an exampe below. This is not symmetry, but needs to be understood as part of the theory.

    An example of 'Similar', not symmetrical.

    An example of 'Similar', not symmetrical.

    Reflection

    Reflection is the nice easy bit of symmetry, for most people including myself, it is often the most obvious symmetry. The mirror opposite of the original image, again using Congruence as the basis for the layout. Below is the Reflection of my half tie-fighter, giving the impression of a more complete image. Much more useful for fighting the rebel scum in the depths of space.

    An example of Reflection and Congruence

    An example of Reflection and Congruence

    Array

    The word Array pops up all over the place in web development and for the design aspect it makes much more sense to me as I can see it visually. It is simply a repeating element, add CongruencePeriodicity and reflection to get some awesome contemporary results. I have used it below to give a repeating design of the tie-fighter.

    An example of an array

    An example of an array

    It changes the tie-fighter image into some sort of chain effect, see how the white curves stand out bringing something more to the image as a whole.  Arrays are evident all around us, brick walls, bee hives, wooden flooring and feathered wings for example. It allows a stable structure to be build and achieve a purpose.

    I have brought all the elements I have mentioned here together to achieve a whole design and would not look too bad as a poster or t-shirt design, I call it the Imperial Symmetry.

    Imperial Symmetry

    Imperial Symmetry

    I hope you found this useful, I know I have and the thing I have learned is that the gaps are as important as the elements. My next piece of homework is to continue with Reflection with the addition of  Rotations.

    Till then :)

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    Stage 6 And so it launches…

    Monday, February 15th, 2010

    After a month of many long hours over numerous days and nights of designing, coding and getting over excited with the results, Frozen Designs version 7 is now live. Beyond the already blogged path of designing from content upwards, I have learned alot and it has helped push my skill sets. I have used alot of Javascript and I give thanks to those wonderful folk out there who provide the scripts to plugin and amend.

    I think my biggest gain has been going through alot of my old photos and giving them a polish and shine using HDR (high dynamic range) logic. What is HDR I hear you ask? Well when you take a photo it can only capture a certain range of light (and in turn colour and detail). So often to get a good balance of the main subject matter you lose detail in the darker and lighter areas. So true HDR, is to take 3 or more photos capturing the correct exposure for the dark areas, the medium areas and the light areas. Then using some software such as Photomatrix you combine the images to give you a final image that shows the detail across it and with it some fantastic results. You can read more about HDR here, I will admit that alot of my images are only using one image and some digitial magic in Adobe Lightroom, but this was due to the fact I did not take the photos with HDR in mind and so did not have the range of exposures required. Even so it is amazing what you visual information a RAW image contains and the results have been amazing compared to the now quite dull originals, please go see yourself. HDR is something I will have in mind with future photo shoots and I will set up the bracket exposure on camera.

    The design page I am very proud of, I still feel it needs some tweaking visually, but then in the words of Leonardo da Vinci ‘Art is never finished, only abandoned’ and a deadline for launch is proof of that. It was a chance to play with unique navigation ideas to view the imagery, again it allowed me extend my coding knowledge through image maps and CSS which is great way to create some fun interaction and still have accessibility in the framework. From here I want to work on design skills and improve what I can create visually using Illustrator and photoshop, maybe one day be featured in those design feeds I keep tweeting or passing on via my google reader shared items.

    Anyway, if you are reading this I hope you are at my website already, if you are viewing this through a rss feed, then go have a dig around.

    So with the website project relaunch at an end, what is next I ask myself. Well I have a new website to build for a client, need to get my creative writing back on track with posts to Imagine Tales along with a novella. Alongside these as mentioned, more photography and desiging of which the result will be posted up at my website and written about here. And I really do need to get out on my mountain bike.

    Till next time.

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    Stage 5 – The Design

    Saturday, January 30th, 2010

    Welcome world,

    After a good few days of Photoshop goodness and alot of movies in the background I have finally got a finished design I am happy with, of which you can see below and click on to see the the live test page.

    I tried various design elements and whilst I wanted to involve ‘ice’ elements they did not really work with the colour scheme, which I wanted to keep as it is warming and received good feedback. So I concentrated on the floral elements and worked with those to bring the site together.

    My observations of adding the design after the layout and base colours is that I can see that there are certain areas that would gain from designing earlier on in the process as I found myself restricted from how I coded it and some ideas would of required alot of going back over covered ground. The main part being the banner, where I wanted design to flow from banner to content area to bring it together, I found myself having to spend alot of time getting elements to line up and recoding DIVs  to lose borders so I could get the backgrounds to run to the edges. If I had a better idea of the final look before I did the colours and secondary layout then I would of been more economical with the images used and improved loading time of the site. Admittedly in these days of broadband it is not so much of an issue but old habits die hard and it’s a good attitude to have when building websites.

    Essentially the design was restricted by the layout, which is just as bad as restricting content and layout to the design. So I would recommend doing a basic layout, not adding borders or padding whilst you come up before you do the designing in Photoshop.

    I am still very happy with the final results, the build process as a whole and look forward to seeing the final website in all it’s glory. So now for wordpress template and the other pages.

    Till the next posting, remember smoking milk can seriously damage your saucepans.

    Read Part 4 – Base Colours

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