Tuesday, 6 May 2014

Make Saturday Your Saladay











Make Saturday Your Saladay
Salad: Make a Meal of it

This work made up my final year project. I was required to choose a topic from a provided list and I selected ‘Wellbeing’. I subsequently developed a government health campaign to get Britain healthy.

Very simply, this campaign encourages the whole of the UK to eat a salad every Saturday. It aims to get people to ditch the takeaways and unhealthy ‘treats’ associated with the weekend and experiment with some fruit and vegetable instead.

This is an awareness programme aimed at people who either don’t know how to eat healthily and those who do know but lack the willpower or urge to do so. Unlike the Change4Life campaign which is a massive endeavour attempting to change individuals’ way of life forever, this initiative is a small step towards improving people’s wellbeing and encouraging them to adopt a healthier eating attitude, similar to the 5-a-day campaign.


The motto is simple for people to understand, remember and join in with. Salad will be made exciting with tasty and creative recipes that people can have fun with.

Monday, 28 April 2014

Horsemeat Company Rebrand





 

  



I was free to choose any topic for this piece of degree coursework and I really wanted to choose a brief that would be challenging and push me to the limit. I developed a very controversial subject at the time; the consumption of horsemeat. Could I make this novelty meat, which is a perfectly acceptable form of food in many countries, appetising to the British public?
The final product designs I created are subtle in their appearance so they wouldn’t cause a stir or protest in a supermarket, but they stand out enough to grab the attention of those looking for something new and different, i.e. my target audience.
The horse shape used on the designs is again understated so as not to cause offence.
The palette I have used works very well together. The green and cream represent nature and freshness, and the contrasting black creates the feeling of sophistication and superiority; showing it is a premium product.
The explanatory ‘our story’ section appears noticeably on each product as I think people will want an explanation about how the meat got to the supermarket shelf, and hopefully when they read it they will understand that there is nothing ethically wrong with eating it.
For those still undecided, I created a company brochure to sit alongside the product range offering answers to any doubters and the little nudge to those on the fence.
The burger and sausage packaging use a sleeve design which works well for these types of food, and the steak is packaged within a carry box with handles. Steaks are a better quality product as they are generally a premium cut of meat and not reconstituted like burgers and sausages, therefore I felt it was necessary to differentiate this and create a higher quality container.
All the designs use the same typography, colour palette and information.



Friday, 25 April 2014

I Am Woman: A series of iconic designs celebrating all that I am

















A concept was developed to create 100 icons to represent me which were then used to create a book focusing on each one at a time.
Individually each symbol has a very simple denotation; a pencil, a pram, a flag. Taken in the context of the book however, the icons have a connotation that reveal something about me to the viewer; I am a designer, a mum and British.
The book title clearly explains what the icons refer to meaning the audience will have a full comprehension when reading further.
The title page is deep pink which is the colour of femininity, nurturing, compassion and love, all terms associated with women and words I wanted the audience to pick up on. Although I didn’t want to be stereotypical with the pink/girl link I did feel that the pink fitted well with the icons in both a black and white form.
The font used is Cinnamon Cake which I think not only has a feminine feel but the almost roughness, handwritten element fits exceptionally well with the light-hearted tone of the book.
The title ‘I Am Woman’ is explained with the text at the bottom of the page ‘A series of 100 iconic designs celebrating all that I am’ and is also the title of a song by Helen Reddy which became an anthem for the women’s liberation movement. The sub title ‘The Pride Collection’ has the letters ‘I’ ‘O’ and ‘O’ in yellow which highlights the 100 theme and strengthens the relationship of my work to the brief.