Thursday, October 15, 2015

Invision Link

Here's our invision link. :) Enjoy.

https://invis.io/G24KN3HBE

Due to the website being made in indesign (I love the grid system way too much and enjoy the type alignment tools there) the filesize for our submission was rather large, sorry bout that! :)

Rationale

Our Rationale

The aim of our campaign was to appeal to a youthful, fun and down to earth audience - who are happily eco friendly, yet not typically motivated to get out and do something about it. Naturally, this audience includes people who are keen on the kiwi tradition of fish and chips. We took a highly illustrative approach - a pastiche of tattoo art style that appeals to our demographic, and subverted it by adding mutated or dead creatures and nasty/familiar trash, rather than the glossy koi or other imagery you might usually see in this style. Closer observation further points out the issue and event info. We used language which is casual and fun to drive home our message - the cleaner our ocean, the better (meaner) our seafood and fish will be, So let's clean up and earn a free feed! We had a very specific strategy - target them at local fish and chip shops through our poster, napkin flyers, and coasters - and give away reusable paper bags for chips and temporary tattoos at the event to further spread the word. Ideally, these local fish and chip shops would even sponsor our event and help us host a free community feed afterwards -  it would benefit them by keeping the local seas cleaner - and could perhaps turn into a big annual event.

Final Solutions

Final Solutions

We ended up coming up with a broad scope of items to cover all bases related to our demographic and even a few additional extras like coloring pages for the website. We also felt that sustainability and eco friendly items made from recyclable or reusable materials was crucial to our campaign. All the items use a similar rhetoric to our poster which is our initial touch point - a pastiche of tattoo art style, which is typically used to depict koi, beautiful flowers and aesthetically pleasing things. Instead we subvert this with an ironic tone, and show angry seafood creatures & dead fish skeletons and contrast these with garish looking garbage to leave a bitter taste in the mouth of the fish and chip connoisseurs, hopefully motivating them to come along to our event and give a hand!


Our final poster. This is the first touchpoint of our campaign, to be posted around communities and local fish and chip shops. The colors are bright and bold to get peoples attention (just like the tattoos it is imitating - something eyecatching for our demographic) and we used a bold call to action in the center with a double meaning: cleaner seas means meaner (better) tasting fish for us all, and also, if you help us clean you will earn a free feed. Rather than beautiful koi, we see dead fish swimming in garbage. We included parodies of kiwi brands in the garbage as we want to have a fun approach throughout the event material - and this brings it all to a kiwi context.


Our final flyer - this would be printed onto a brown recycled paper napkin and distributed at local fish & chip shops to give event information as well as a map. As we couldn't find square brown recycled paper napkins, or a place willing to print onto that really, we went with a thin brown recycled stock to make it simulate the look of a napkin.


Our final coasters - these will be printed on brown recycled cardboard stock, giving it a raw and eco friendly aesthetic which also carries over that ink-on-paper feel. :) These could also have info about our website, or tips for recycling on them and would be given out with drinks at fish and chip shops or local shops/bottle stores.


Our website - and one of the main touchpoints of our advertising strategy. We tried to carry over the same illustrative style from our other media, the ink accents, outside of the artwork and headings we wanted it to look pretty clean by contrast to make the colors and tattoo aesthetic pop.



These are the temporary tattoos I designed as the third media item set. They fit the aesthetic and theme of our strategy perfectly so were an obvious transmedia item, and I think they came out pretty great. :) These would be given out during the event, and if people wore these they would be a good way to get people talking and in turn advertise the event!


An extra item we came up with, are reusable washable paper bags to be given out at the beach during the free feed. These help with sustainability as they can be reused at the fish and chip shops or for other things. These would feature some of our images, our logo and website address.

All items are offered for sale on our website.

Sketches

Here are the original sketches of our media items, before coloring digitally using a watercolor ish technique. I drew these in pencil then outlined them in a black ink pen, and used my phone to photograph them. I tweaked and edited the photos in a drawing software prior to coloring.









Type Options

I looked at several hand written script fonts that would work with our tattoo inspired aesthetic - it was important to pick something inky - reminiscent of a calligraphy brush ink, or a squids ink. ;) DK Downward Fall was the font that worked the best in the end. For the body text we kept it simple and went with Univers.

Week 6

A really hectic week, but thankfully we have an extension to work on things. The time frame between finishing our poster and the roll out of all our other media items was very small, but thankfully I have already drawn most of the material for it.


Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Different Transmedia Items

- Coasters -
these can be given away at fish and chips shops just like our flyers -  sending a little message to our target audience whenever they put their can or bottle down.


A scallop with a mouth full of trash.




A grumpy octopus mad about his home being ruined. :O

- Temporary Tattoos -


In this one a ghastly looking squid is mad because his treasure chest has been filled with nothing but filthy trash! I'd be mad too. 


This dead skeleton-like octopus is king of the garbage heap, but he sure misses a clean ocean home!


This fish has a spine made of chains and encircles trash - it puts forward the idea of a chained fate - if all the ocean life dies because of our garbage, what will happen to us?


We decided to incorporate some of the designs we made up onto washable, reusable paper bags. These can be used to contain / give away fish and chips at shop or events, and can be reused to hold any manner of things such a plants, art supplies etc. Just thinking of little ways to be more eco friendly! 

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Grids


The back of our flyer is very grid dependent, and contains lots of tidbits of info and imagery in a 'random' looking layout. So I had to try quite a few different grids to get it working. :/




Having a margin for the grid seemed necessary for making sure the text wasn't crammed too close together and to keep it all legible!







Friday, October 9, 2015

Text

About Page 

Clean Seas Mean Feeds encourages people to help keep our coasts clean for a more sustainable environment and better quality saefood.Clean Seas Mean Feeds wants to help provide people with the means and resources to help defend the ocean and its wild life.In 2009 New Zealand’s seafood industry was twice ranked one of the most sustainably managed fishery in the world and we want to help keep it this way.When litter gets left around beaches, it travels out to sea through drains, streams, lagoons, estuaries and rivers.Once in our oceans, rubbish harms and kills sea creatures, who get caught in it or mistake it for food. Toxins from plastics poison our seafood. With a whopping 88% of all New Zealanders consuming fish at least once a month we need to all do our part in keeping the coasts and beaches clean. We are what we eat. Help be part of our local solution to a global problem.



Events Page 

Clean up your act bro and come help provide Kai for the future sign up for the Clean Seas Mean Feeds event near you.
Help us remove trash from the beaches and coasts we all love in order for a more sustainable environment and better quality kai.
As the population grows food resources become more scarce and that includes seafood, therefore for if it’s not sustainable its likely to run out that means no more kai for you or your crew. Within the next decade our ocean will hold about one kilogram of plastic for every three kilograms of fish.
Trash bags, gloves,  will be supplied along with free fish and chips and other goodies for all those who part take in the event.

Location 
Look out for the organisers in  highly visibility  vests along the meeting points shown on the map.
All rubbish will be gathered up at 5:30 followed by some free kai for your awesome efforts.

Sign Up 
Email
Name 

Zip Code/ Postal Code


If you take action in the event and have not already registered, you will receive periodic updates and communications from Clean Seas Mean Feeds






Facts for home page 

New Zealand’s commercial seafood insdustry exported 1.25 billion dollars worth of seafood in 2013
88% of all New Zealanders consume fish at least once a month 
NZ coastline 15,134km. his is the ninth longest coastline in the world.
Nearly 1 in 10 fish in the region often have plastic in their stomachs.
Lack of waste collection and management impacts public health, food safety and water quality.
80 percent of marine pollution comes from the land. 
8,327 bottle caps found during Sustainable Coastlines' December 2011 coastal clean-up of Rangitoto Island, Auckland, New Zealand.

1,064,680 litres of rubbish collected from the sustainable coast 

Sustainable coastlines collected 
The filthy 5

91,215 Plastic bags   8.1%

205,793 Plastic of unknown origin  18.4%

160,186 Food wrappers 14.3%

91,943 Bottle caps and lids 8.2%

84,510 Polystyrene / foam 7.5%


single- use plastics  72.4% 

From december 2010 to October 2013  
from 34 events together 



Thursday, October 8, 2015

Week 5


We changed the main text to what has become our events call to action and logo: Clean Seas, Mean Feeds. Our poster was very close to being perfect, we just needed to bring the issue up more clearly in the text now. Just an extra line pointing out how the pollution affects the quality of our kai. :) Other than that, I want to make the lines a bit thicker to match the other imagery I have since drawn for our project, and also touch up the coloring a little.

Interim 2


This was the poster we submitted for the second interim, people seemed to like it generally, but there were mixed feelings about the main heading and taglines, and how those contributed to the rhetoric. Some also said that the satirical names on the trash distracted from the main text, where as others loved these being in the composition and the fun of them, and found it pulled them in to the poster more.


At this point our flyer, which is intended to be a napkin, is still just in the hand drawn mock-up phase. We were told that having less text on the front would keep it tidy and just as effective, especially if we assume they will be looking at the back where we will have random facts, event info and the website link.

All in all a very useful and informative interim which gave us alot of things to consider. :)


Inspirations

The main art inspiration behind our design was a tattoo aesthetic - popular with young adults - people in their 20's, who like to eat cheap, and therefore eat things like fish and chips. There were a lot of examples of this around, but the tattoos of things like koi and those inspired by japanese ukiyo-e woodblock prints (hokusai's prints with waves) were the most relevant to this assignment. We subvert the norm of these tattoos, by drawing tattoo esque designs and adding the context of our beach cleanup into play using trash, dead creatures, angry sea life etc.



some of the examples were a more dark approach and really cool looking, they were good inspiration for our designs.











We found it was quite common that people did a pastiche of the famous 'great wave' print and incorporated trash, so the correlation between the two themes is definitely appropriate,



First Mock Up of website



The first website mock up used for the second interim ive had to make alterations and changes to the grid and we've decided to use barely any photography as it distorts our illustrative flair.
Going to use a 12 bar grid and make the page taller so is content isnt squished

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Pintrest Board Links

https://www.pinterest.com/lani1808/web-koha/

https://www.pinterest.com/lani1808/koha-imagery-sources/


https://www.pinterest.com/lani1808/koha-beach-clean-up/