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Issue 6 IN THIS ISSUE HOW DO YOU SAY HELLO IN PURPLE? NEW AXIS PROJECT For more information about AXIS visual please visit our web site. www.axisvisual.com
Every project, no matter how big or how small, no matter if it's formal and serious or playful and entertaining, all have visual languages that have been assembled from endless sources to help reinforce the purpose and meaning of the piece. This visual language draws from the common experiences of a specific audience. They are the historical languages of the past, the accepted standards of the way things were shown before. They are the images surrounding us as a society today. They are old languages and new. They are the patterns, textures, colors, letterforms, emotions, feelings and just about anything that one can see, hear, smell, taste and touch. And each and every one of them carries with it an emotional and cerebral connection. These languages, or maybe I should say the specific visual vocabulary, or in some lesser evolved cases, the primal grunts of early communication are different for every person, group, industry, gender, age, etc. But there are common visual "words" that are understood on a subconscious and sometimes conscious level by each audience to mean specific things. These, are the tools of the designer. We, or at least the designers that do more than simply make things pretty, learn about the specific audience and build a communication from these "language" elements that reinforce the purpose and meaning of the desired message. Lets face it. before a person reads anything they see an image, a composition, a color combination, a style that gives them an impression that inspires them to either get excited and look further or hit "delete," throw it away or simply walk away.
One might think that after acquiring all these language skills, it then becomes a simple matter of picking the right visual "words" and voila! you have a great promotion. As in cooking, (damn, I'm mixing my analogies here) having the ingredients is only part of the process. I can tell you that you need eggs, flour, water and some seasoning and without discussing how much, when to add what, and how to cook it, ten people will have ten very different results, some good, some total failures, and some in between. This culinary ability is the design process. Knowing (as I have mentioned in a previous newsletter) when to whisper some parts of the visual message and when to yell, knowing that hitting the audience over the head with an overly used visual phrase becomes an unproductive cliché, knowing that certain messages require a mix of languages in order to deliver complex qualities of a product, and knowing when to use a strong and simple "opening message" to draw attention, these are all decisions that a designer makes in order to increase the impact of the message. But what are the actual words in this language? What are the elements of design that are flexible enough to deliver this visual verbiage? Images of course, are the obvious first thought, and often this is where many people end their thinking of message reinforcement. But what about conceptual imagery, an image unrelated to the immediate product being promoted? This is a way to reinforce a products capability or quality. You'll see this often in advertising sometimes in a serious manner, sometimes using humor. Photography or illustration are also ways to deliver a visual language. How about the image style or treatment, or the size of it on the page? The typography treatment, the composition, the colors chosen, the visual heirarchy (the order that we want the reader to see the information), the paper it is printed on, all of these can be modified, arranged and otherwise adjusted to reinforce a message.
So, let me get my English/Visual translation book out and solve all your promotional challenges. It's here some place. Maybe in my other pocket... just kidding. If it were that simple, if a basic book could have the "design/promotion code" anyone (and maybe everyone) would be delivering the same, and therefore boring visual answers. The amount of variables from the different audiences, different products, different business areas, different company personalities, even the different points in time, are far too great to allow for a simple visual equation. In the end, when traveling in the foreign lands of promoting, you may be able to ask for the bathroom or order a beer, but to really communicate, an interpreter, a translator, a guide... a good designer, is required to talk the language.
NEW PROJECTS FROM AXIS Below is an illustration / design style and a few sample spreads from a campaign that we created for The MandMarblestone Group AXIS visual worked on this project with Markitects, Inc. a strategic communications firm, to rebrand The MandMarblestone Group and enhance its communications with investment firms, CPAs and end users, as part of an overall effort to raise the awareness of the firm as a niche provider of customized retirement plans for privately owned businesses and professional service firms. To see many more samples of our work please visit our website at www.axisvisual.com
If you have specific ideas or topics you would like to read about, or if you would like to contribute a related article, please let us know at (office@axisvisual.com) At AXIS visual we are very conscious of the abundance of unwanted email and do not wish to contribute to it. You are receiving this because you are either a valued client of AXIS visual or a contact made through networking or email avenues. If you found this first issue of Notes From the Point worth while, we are happy you enjoyed it. If you don't mind receiving Notes From the Point from time to time we will keep you on our list. If it doesn't quite fit your needs, please email AXIS visual (office@axisvisual.com) with the word REMOVE in the subject line and you will be removed, erased, and completely eradicated from our email list. Also, we do not share our list with anybody, anywhere, ever. Thank you. William J. Milnazik Problem Solver #1 billm@axisvisual.com ![]() Contact us for your corporate communications needs. 610-527-0332 |
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