What are we learning today?
1. Introduce Calendar Project (First Video)
2. Calendar Requirements & Examples
3. Planning for your Calendar (Thumbnails) (First Video, second half)
4. Demo: Making a Rough (Second Video)
5. Objectives to Accomplish Today:
Lens Blur
- Open an image with a large depth of field
- Use the handout to make a selection & slowly fade in the depth of field
- Save & upload the before & after version to Schoology
Blur Overlay
- Open a photo and apply the blur overlay to it
- Turn in before & after on Schoology
Calendar
- Change the month & dates to fit each month
- Crop, resize & place photos for the month pages
- Add any other touches to month pages
- Place in the cover design (possibly using the lens flare) on page 1
- Place the collage on page 14
- Export the calendar
- Make a proof sheet & print it
- Adjust colors, errors as seen on proof
- Export the calendar as a Print PDF
- Upload PDF to Schoology
- Turn in physical copy of thumbnails, rough, & proof to bin
6. Review/What’s Next
Handouts: None
Period 3
What are we learning today?
1. Review Turning in Your Screen
2. PPT: Principles of Design
3. Objectives to Accomplish Today:
Screen Printing
- Choose a name or image for a company
- Brainstorm and draw 4 thumbnails
- Choose your favorite thumbnail
- Develop that design into a large, clean, colored rough
- Obtain, label, & degrease a screen
- Coat the screen
- Convert the vector to black & white, email to Mr. Tate
- Expose the screen
- Wash out the screen with a cone spray of water
- Patch Pinholes
- Block out the screen
- Cut paper to print on*
- Cut out the comprehensive, center it on cut paper, tape in place
- Print the design
- Reclaim the screen
- Mat the best print*
- Paperclip thumb, rough, comp, 2 prints, matted & rubric
Logo
- Choose a brand to base your logo on
- Draw 4 thumbnails around that idea
- Choose the best thumbnail and develop it into a rough
- Color the rough with colored pencils
- Vector the image in Ai
- Export the image as a PNG (File>Export)
4. Review/What’s Next
Handouts: Principles of Design Notes