Portfolio Design
This guide provides design and technical information for portfolios that are used for placement in the profession. Prepared by the UT School of Architecture Professional Residency Program, 2015.
Portfolio Design
A. Designing Your Portfolio
B. Making Your Portfolio in InDesign
Getting Started
Setting up Your File
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36
Workflow for Photoshop, Illustrator & InDesign
6 Orientation
38
Starting a New InDesign File
8
Elements of a Portfolio
40
Master Pages
10
Choosing Content
46 Guidelines
Book Size & Binding
48
Page Numbers
Design Elements
50 Styles
14 Grids
52
Paragraph Styles
16
Hierarchy vs. Fields
54
Character Styles
18
White space
56
Object Styles
20
Color vs. Grayscale
58 Swatches
22
Title Pages
60
Swatch Libraries
24
Model Photos
62
Align palette
64
Photoshopping Models
Typography 26 Fonts
Preparing your File to Print
28 Text
66
Spell Check
30
Designing Your Text
68
First, Packaging
32
Page Numbers
70
Image File Rules
72
PDF Settings for Printing
74
PDF Settings for Email
4
GETTING STARTED
Book Size & Binding Standard Book Sizes
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The act of becoming enlightened is about breaking away from the mundane earthly experience. The same metaphor is used through the entry sequence. The zendo is about breaking your connection to the ground and making the connection ambiguous. From the exterior, you approach at an oblique angle so that the reflective glass along the bottom makes it appear as though the wildflower field continues uninterrupted beneath the zendo as it floats gently off the ground.
back, so as you enter the building, you step through a sliver of light and feel as though you’re stepping over empty space. This is your second indication that you’re leaving mundane life behind, and prepares your thought for meditation.
GRAND DINING
The porch is pulled back from the zendo by 6", with a small threshold to carry you into the building. The roof is also pulled
Spring 2014| Professor Cisco Gomes Technical Communication Studio State Highway1431, Jonestown, Texas design team: Claire Edelen, Alexandra Krippner
8x10 portrait [1] and 10x8 landscape [3] are the most common book sizes.
OFFICES
LECTURE HALL
MANICURED GARDEN
The city of Jonestown, Texas, Gateway to the Hill Country, was formerly an access point to Lake Travis until lake levels dropped, leaving a dry valley winding through the community. Seeking a new identity in the face of drought and encroaching suburbia, Jonestown has struggled to define itself as a destination. The design aims to draw upon Jonestown’s significant topographical assets as a way to refocus attention on a positive resource.
WORKSHOP LOUNGE
Unless you have a driving reason why you need a book that is taller in portrait orientation [2] or longer in landscape orientation [4], it’s probably best to stick with the 8x10/10x8 size. 8x10 looks professional and is easy to print either on blurb.com, at Dynamic Reprographics (Austin-print shop), or by hand-trimming 8.5x11 sheets.
Jonestown City Center ENTRY SEQUENCE
APPROACHING VIEW OF FLOATING ZENDO
The new city center, comprised of the town’s library, city offices, a dance hall, 11-room hotel, and market space, positions itself along Ranch to Market Road 1431 as it cuts through Jonestown. The project makes its own cut into the topography, revealing a raw limestone wall that visually becomes part of the building itself. The spaces most utilized by the residents of Jonestown are both visible from the road and accessed by this path, embedding themselves into the hillside. A thick masonry wall along RM1431 blocks sound from the road while turning views away from the dry riverbed and up to the hillside, offering glimpses and frames of the surrounding topography.
ZENDO
SITE PLAN
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1 8X10 PORTRAIT
Visitors to Jonestown, however, take advantage of the long-range vistas from the run of hotel rooms suspended off the side of the hill. Tucked away from the road, the hotel allows visitors access to the city center while it remains hidden from the everyday functions of the town. In the rare event of rain, the water that has been so absent in Jonestown is celebrated, filtered through the layers of a green roof and directed through a large scupper. A long swimming pool beneath the hotel takes advantage of this collected water as it parallels the dry riverbed, offering visitors a new kind of waterfront access. 4
5
2 EXTRA-TALL PORTRAIT
You can go a bit smaller or a bit larger, but don’t go to extremes. If your portfolio is too small, it will probably get lost in a large pile of other submitted portfolios. If it’s too large, you run the risk of annoying the person who is trying to sort and store the firm’s portfolios.
Binding Silver spiral binding is a classic, safe bet. It won’t count against you. In fact, some HR reviewers prefer it because it’s sturdy and all the pages will lie flat. If you want to be more original, make sure it’s not too difficult to open and close, and that the portfolio is still able to lie flat. Originality is good, but ultimately, you want the portfolio reviewers to focus on your work, and not have to figure out your binding.
THERMAL BATHS + INFRASTRUCTURE Vertical Studio. Fall 2013
The UTSOA computer lab has silver spiral bindings you can buy and a binder machine you can use. Also, you can print through blurb.com. With blurb, be aware that they only have certain bindings and sizes available, and there’s a wait time to receive your book.
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15
3 10X8 LANDSCAPE
Dynamic Reprographics, here in Austin, also does high quality binding and printing.
4 EXTRA-LONG LANDSCAPE
6
GETTING STARTED
Orientation
7 PORTRAIT
LANDSCAPE
domestic grounds “Domestic Grounds is an ongoing research project that seeks to disclose the potential for tactile stimulation of floor design. In the shoeless paradise of the domestic environment, alternating rugs, wood boards and tiles: softness and hardness, warmth and cold, the floor plane is already a celebration of tactility. If we strategically reconsider the way we apply material and form in the design of floors and floor coverings, we can radically increase the performance of these surfaces to include restorative properties and amplify the sensory experience of domestic circulation. As an ideal site for a case study, we chose a corner unit in one of the high-rise towers of 860-880 Lake Shore Apartments in Chicago by Mies van der Rohe. Located at the heart of the dense urban Chicago center, and therefore surrounded by miles and miles of heavy traffic, pavement and asphalt, this site, automatically draws attention to the home floor as a secluded oasis for the feet in the midst of the city.” (from Nerea Feliz)
Portrait vs. Landscape
For this project, I assisted in researching walking patterns in the home; produced 3D models and drawings; iterated designs for the floor tiling, and cast a full-scale mock-up of the tile using the CNC router. design assistant fall 2014 professor: nerea feliz team: mark nordby, david heaton
Either choice is fine, just make sure it’s appropriate to the orientation of the images you use. Landscape spreads tend to be very long and are better for long, horizontal images. They also usually allow a bit more content on each spread. Portrait spreads end up a bit more square, which usually lends itself to a more minimalist layout with more white space or with fewer images per page.
MANIPULATING THE ARCHETYPE Vertical Studio. Spring 2014
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3
rendering of three-dimensional floor tile 12
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1. geometric analysis of existing residence 2. formal manipulation of archetypal home 3. sketches illustrating approach to addition diagramming walking in the home
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tiling pattern based on most frequent movement
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1. drainage + storage at intersection of gables 2. site model showing connection to existing 3. oor plan showing repetition of single mass 4. sections of variety of indoor/outdoor living 8
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to live on lady bird lake The Lady Bird is an 80’ x 80’ point tower in Austin. What we love about our homes is being inside them. What a tower design lacks is a focus on the interior of these spaces. We have towers smothered in curtain walls but with no sense of interiority. In rendering of our cities of the future, what we see is either a depressingly desolate landscape with the tower as ruin, or we see the tower as an exhibit of innovative structure.
1. process models showing evolution of gable 2. nal model with specic focus on materiality 10
11
80’ 80’
But the tower doesn’t have to be forboding or futuristic. The tower can be classic. Michael Benedikt challenged us to think that the tower can even be for those with vertigo, a fear of heights. For those people, it’s important to emphasize interiority. My goal for this tower was to design a system in which the interior of the tower flows out freely from the structure. It’s like when the cheese gushes out of your grilled cheese sandwich. The cheese is supposed to be inside, but it’s spilling out of the bread, and the bread is just trying to hold it together. If the bread, in this case, is the tower’s structure, then the cheese is the tower unit’s interior. And in this tower, the cheese lets in light without sacrificing the interior. advanced studio fall 2014 professor: michael benedikt
West 5th Street: site color study 18
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GETTING STARTED
9
Elements of a Portfolio
FRONT COVER
C
Portfolios typically have: COVER TABLE OF CONTENTS
TOC
P5
PROJECT 1
2 3 4 5 ...
suNNY K sChNeBerger sunnyks@utexas.edu http://sunny.schne.org 404.408.9602
TABLE OF CONTENTS
P1
RESUMÉ
TREEHOUSE COMMUNITY
4
FLOATING ZENDO
10
WOVEN BOWIE STREET COMPLEX
16
FOUR ROOF CLOVER
22
FLUTTERING FACADE
26
BASIC INITIATIVE: LOS PILETONES
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CRESCENDO
36
TREES IN PEACE
40
2
BACK COVER
3
PROJECT 1
P6
Cover
WORK: CABIN first floor plan ( beyond )
• Must include your name
LIVE-WORK: UNIT ONE, 1 BEDROOM first floor plan, ADA-Accessible unit
second floor plan
LIVE: 2 BEDROOM first floor plan
UNIT TWO, 1 BEDROOM second floor plan, second unit
second floor plan
The Treehouse live-work community is designed for those who want to get away and focus on their work, such as writers or introverted freelancers. Living here, you are able to work in your own writer’s treehouse propped up on stilts. By getting out of your house and into a small room with a wall of glass that faces nothing but canopy, you can take advantage of the isolation to really focus on whatever your project is.
Treehouse CoMMuNITY Live-Work Community Red Bluff Rd Austin, TX, 2012 academic
May include title or date. Date may be its published year (ex. 2015) or year range of projects (ex.2012–2015).
LIVE: 1 BEDROOM first floor plan
Writers cabins and 1-bedroom upper units can be FABRICATED OFF-SITE to halve construction time RAINWATER COLLECTION RADIANT HEATING AND COOLING with VERTICAL HEAT LOOPS
section A
PILE FOUNDATIONS
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5
0
20'
section B 8
Table of Contents • Include project titles and page numbers
P2
P7
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PROJECT 2 (ETC…) The act of becoming enlightened is about breaking away from the mundane earthly experience. The same metaphor is used through the entry sequence. The zendo is about breaking your connection to the ground and making the connection ambiguous. From the exterior, you approach at an oblique angle so that the reflective glass along the bottom makes it appear as though the wildflower field continues uninterrupted beneath the zendo as it floats gently off the ground.
May include contact info here or on inside cover. May include project images.
back, so as you enter the building, you step through a sliver of light and feel like you’re stepping over empty space. This is your second indication that you’re leaving mundance life behind, and prepares your thought for mediation.
The porch is pulled back from the zendo by 6", with a small threshold to carry you into the building. The roof is also pulled
roof plan
skylight
Once you enter the building, you see a giant slatted pod that GRAND DINING seems to float easily within the room. This is the meditative space. At the opposite end of the building sits a statue of Buddha at the same height as the meditating pod. You remove your shoes, grab a cushion, and step up onto the slatted shelves of the pod—the final break from earth before meditating while sitting mostly on air.
go? The slotted pod allows your breath to move the wall in front of you. This breaks down the physical barrier in front of you, rendering it irrelevant, and further reinforces the zendo’s concept of breaking away from this world.
As your facing the wall, thinking about the act of meditating, and concentrating on your breathing, where does your breath wooden roofing
OFFICES
mechanical systems
The practice of zen is quieting your mental state and clearing your thought until you reach enlightenment. During meditation, it is common practice in the zendo (meditation hall) to remove your shoes and sit cross-legged facing the wall with your eyes open and your hands resting on your knees. While meditating, you concentrate on your breathing to clear your mind.
FloaTINg ZeNDo Zen Meditation Retreat Center Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center Austin, TX, 2012 academic
For designing the zen center, I concentrated on the zendo and two parts of the meditation experience: preparing and practicing.
Projects
MANICURED GARDEN
LECTURE HALL
WORKSHOP LOUNGE
meditation pod
exterior wall slats exterior wood wall with clerestory
ZENDO
window screen with devotional niche manicured rock garden
10
11 site plan reflective low-e glass wooden floor
• Typical range is 36–60 pages
WoveN BoWIe sTreeT CoMplex 12
Retail, Offices, Hotel, and Residences Bowie St Austin, TX, 2011 academic zendo axonometric
• Put your best projects first and last
site plan
Include your resumé/CV at the end. Career Services can provide guidance and feedback on its order and content.
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RESUMÉ
P3
CurrICuluM vITae UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS, AUSTIN
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE
VOLUNTEER
Austin, TX, expected 2015 M.Arch I candidate GPA: 3.62/4.0
Basic Initiative Design/Build Los Piletones, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 2012
Graphic Designer and Assistant Editor The Writings of Mary Baker Eddy Boston, MA, 2006–2010 Did print design and typesetting work, and supported the Senior Graphic Designer. In charge of providing editorial content and support for my department’s projects. Also in charge of all facets of our presence on the web—on both internal and external sites. In charge of all advertising, including domestic and international. Honors: Awarded the entire Merit Increase for the department, 2009
AIA Austin Home Tours Austin, TX, 2010, 2011, 2012
PRINCIPIA COLLEGE
Architectural Theory Intensive Study Argentina and Uruguay, 2012
Elsah, IL, 2006 B.A. Hispanic Studies (major), Studio Art (minor) GPA: 3.7/4.0
Art studies with Principia College Northwest USA and France, 2005
HARVARD GRADUATE SCHOOL OF DESIGN
Victoria University Wellington, New Zealand, 2004
Cambridge, MA, 2006 Career Discovery Architecture student
Intensive Spanish language and cultural training Playalingua, Playa del Carmen, Mexico, 2004
ACADEMIC HONORS
A. B. Lucas Secondary School London, Ontario, Canada, 1997–2001
Chapel design won for design/build group project, UT Austin and Dulce Agua Farms, 2012
ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES
Full-tuition academic scholarship Principia College Trustees, 4 of 4 years
ISSUE:009 Editor, UT Austin, 2012–2013
ISSUE:010 advisor, UT Austin, 2013–2014 ISSUE:008 editorial committe, UT Austin, 2011–2012 Writing Center Tutor, Principia Writing Center, 2006 Photo Editor, Principia Pilot, 2005–2006 Teacher’s Assistant, Principia College, 2005 Brooks House Board, Principia College, 2004
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Resumé
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Quality is your goal, not page count. It is better to have a short portfolio with high quality work than a longer mediocre portfolio. Choose just your best work. You may want to use more spreads for comprehensive projects like Tech Comm or Sound Building. Better to add a few pages or cut a few images than to crowd them.
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• Choose between 5–8 of your best projects (typically 2-3 spreads each, but adjust per project) • Consider the rhythm of projects (short vs. long) as you sequence the work (See Spread Count p.22)
While developing a more urban area near Whole Foods on Lamar, I became very interested in “reasons to stay.” While other successful public spaces in Austin, I saw that people inhabit spaces by both pausing and exploring the sites, creating a very personal experience. There are the same possibilities here. There are many opportunities to sit and pause, as well as wander. Visiting the complex should never become routine, but always open to exploration, new paths, and new views.
zendo studying
BACK COVER
P4
RESUME
Graphic Designer pro bono, Lucky Mutts Austin, TX, 2010 Habitat for Humanity Kennesaw, GA, 2006; Austin, TX, 2011
MEMBERSHIPS American Institute of Graphic Arts 2007–2008 Daughters of the American Revolution 2009–present
Corral Counselor, Adventure Unlimited Ranches Buena Vista, CO, 2003 Planned, organized, and carried out recreational programs. Supervised the day-to-day activities of 18 people, created reports for supervisors, and maintained ranch equipment. Operated independently of supervision during multi-day expeditions. Web Designer, freelance 2000–2006 Built websites for professors from Appalachian State University and Georgia State University, the Garden Club of London, and A. B. Lucas Secondary School.
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GETTING STARTED
11
Choosing Content Most people will spend less than 10 seconds looking at your portfolio. Your first job is to make them want to look at it again and for longer.
HEAVY WATER is a permanent installation to be built in the fall of 2014 for Tasmania’s Museum of Old and New Art (MONA). It is part of a series of installations for MONA’s River Derwent: Heavy Metals Festival, in which architecture students from the University of Texas, MIT and MONASH work with local Tasmanian scientists and artists. The projects attempt to educate the public on the river’s heavy metal contamination via a built object which actively remediates the Derwent Estuary.
Present your best work in a way that makes it easily understood.
The design evolved from collaborations between students in Coleman Coker’s design|build studio. A large portion of the studio was devoted to researching the complexities of this ecological issue and determining where to insert our intervention. The final product features a platform over the estuary with walls of falling water and a seemingly suspended mass above. The estuary is literally drawn up to greet the visitor, creating an intimacy with the surrounding elements. The turbidity aerates the estuary water which works to keep heavy metals trapped in the sediment.
Choose Each Project with Purpose Know your audience. Know yourself. Choose a variety of projects that will appeal to the type of firm you are interested in and will demonstrate your strengths and capabilities.
“A G O O D S O L U T I O N I S G O O D B E C A U S E I T I S I N H A R M O N Y W I T H T H O S E L A R G E R PAT T E R N S - A N D T H I S H A R M O N Y W I L L , I T H I N K , B E F O U N D T O H A V E A N A T U R E O F A N A L O G Y. . . A G O O D S O L U T I O N AC T S W I T H I N T H E L A R G E R PAT T E R N T H E W A Y A H E A L T H Y O R G A N A C T S W I T H I N T H E B O D Y.
Each project you choose should be essential to showing your diversity.
WENDELL BERRY S O LV I N G F O R PAT T E R N INSTRUCTOR:
YEAR:
STUDENTS:
COLEMAN COKER
THREE
LOCATION:
C L I E N T:
HOBART, TASMANIA
MONA
S H E L L E Y E VA N S SHELBY BLESSING DAV I D S H A R R E T T KYE KILLIAN M O R G A N PA R K E R
Creating a Visual Story Just like presenting your project for Final Review, you need to create a story about your project.
THE STARTING IMAGE EXPRESSES WHAT THE “BIG IDEA” IS AND ALSO SHOWS WHAT THE PROJECT LOOKS LIKE
Narrate your story through images in a way that explains the original problem posed by the studio, your thesis, and then how your project solves the problem and fulfills the thesis. Text should be visually clear. Your written narrative should add extra meaning by placing the reader into the experience your project creates. CHEMICAL DISPOSAL
AUTO POLLUTANTS
R UN O F F
HYPERTROPHICATION
You should include a variety of types of images, including process work, renderings, model photos, ortho drawings, diagrams, etc., but each of the images you present should be essential to explaining the project. If you can remove the image and not lose any vital information about the project, do so.
4580
Heavy metal contamination in the Derwent Estuary resulted from decades of pollutants being dumped into the river by nearby industries, the primary offender being a local zinc smelter. This dumping of toxins into the estuary halted over 25 years ago, but heavy metal contamination of marine life persists. However, the metals have begun to sink down to the estuary floor and are slowly being trapped by a sediment cap. Eventually, they will no longer enter the food chain.
4900
2750
1730
2150
It’s easy to be tempted to include every drawing you created for your project. However, try to use the least number of images to tell the most about the project.
H E AV Y M E TA L S
300
The only danger to this slow process of healing is the persistence of human activities which exacerbate the problem. Stormwater runoff and effluent stations cause an excess of nutrients to enter into the estuary. This sudden rush of nutrients causes algae blooms which result in the depletion of oxygen in the water. Hypoxia not only kills marine life, but causes changes in ionic charge in the water which draws heavy metals up out from the sediment and back into the food chain.
1250 250
Editing Out Drawings
O2
700
FERTILIZER
250
S EWAGE ANIMAL WASTE
410
LAWN FERTILIZER
N U T R IEN T S
Identify the image that shows your big idea and then feature it in your design. [See the Hierarchy section]
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render by kye killian section by morgan parker
THE REST OF THE PROJECT’S SPREADS TELL THE STORY OF ITS CONSTRUCTION AND EXPERIENCE
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GETTING STARTED
13
4HYMH 1LSS`ÄZO
Cactus Greenhouse
FALL 2011 CRITIC: JACK SANDERS >P[O 2`L 2PSSPHU ,[OHU 4LULIYVRLY 9HJOLSSL Simon
Austin, TX Fall 2012
Professor Danelle Briscoe
04
In this project, we were instructed to design interactive screens for the Trans-Pecos Festival of Music and Love in Marfa, TX. The screens were to be used as a projection surface MVY ZOVY[ ÄSTZ WYV]PKLK I` ]PKLV artists. From the start, we were captivated by the idea of creating a NOVZ[S` HTVYWOV\Z ZOHWL ÅVH[PUN out in the desert. To accomplish this, we needed semi-translucent sheets suspended over an upward-facing projector. Our initial idea was to create a kinetic sculpture in which the sheets, suspended by crankshafts, would behave in wave-like patterns as the cranks were turned. Due to logistics, we decided to both simplify and strengthen the design by harnessing the abundance of desert wind already present in Marfa.
We designed a rigid 10’ x 10’ x 10’ frame of bamboo, fastened together with zip ties in forms borrowed from traditional bamboo lashing techniques. In order to transport the bamboo easier, the vertical elements were cut in half to be rejoined on site with axially loaded lapped joints.
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THE INTRODUCTORY IMAGE GIVES AN OVERALL LOOK AT THE PROJECT. SUBSEQUENT IMAGES EXPLAIN THE PROCESS AND DESIGN WITHOUT OVERLOADING THE GRAPHICS THE FIRST SPREAD SHOWS THE EXPERIENCE, CONCEPTION, AND CONSTRUCTION, WHILE THE FOLLOWING SPREADS FILL OUT THE REST OF THE STORY.
Cactus Greenhouse Austin, Texas
The natural internal architecture of cacti inspired the study of voronoi systems. Cacti create micro-systems as their spines and form utilize wind to collect water while blocking the sun. Studying how a structure could mimic this complex yet ordered nature led to the design of an extruded voronoi greenhouse. The large greenhouse is comprised of an extruded space-frame system acting more like a column and beam system. The complexity of the greenhouse is met by the ordered system of the educational and administrative program. While the greenhouse rises two stories and jaggedly wraps around the entrances the additional program is disguised under a berm allowing the greenhouse to be the focal point of the structure. The cactus exhibits are housed within the structure as visitors are guided in and through the building. Leisure seating is provided within the center of the building for visitors, students, and administration. The educational program includes laboratories and classrooms with direct access to the greenhouse.
06
Cactus Greenhouse
The strongest aspect of the design was an accident. We had dug a deep OVSL \UKLY [OL 1LSS`ÄZO [V OV\ZL [OL projector. Night fell and we were still ^VYRPUN VU ÄUPZOPUN [OL HZZLTIS` so we stuck a shop light down in the hole to give us light. It ended up JYLH[PUN [OL MLLS VM H JHTWÄYL >L watched as festival goers saw it in the distance, and with eyes transÄ_LK ^HSRLK V]LY [V PU]LZ[PNH[L [OL glowing hell pit in the desert sand. By the end of the night, a sizable group of strangers made up of all ages were sitting in a circle around the pit, talking amongst themselves and tugging at the tendrils hanging MYVT [OL NLU[S` \UK\SH[PUN 1LSS`ÄZO
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32
08
Cactus Greenhouse
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10
Cactus Greenhouse
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DESIGN ELEMENTS
Grids There are two basic composition techniques in photography and graphic design: the rule of thirds and symmetry.
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structural Glulam column
The manufacturing facilities are composed of Glulam column and beam. The beam and column are connected with steel connections. The 98’ long span beam is connected with steel connections. Steel tension wire truss is used to reduce the depth of the beam to provide more space for manufacturing.
CLT roof structure
The 23-story timber high-rise tower is consisted of four CLT (Cross Laminated Timber) structural cores and 12 glulam columns for vertical structure, and CLT floor panels for horizontal structure.
structural CLT cores MANUFACTURING: Glulam column and beam
The mixed-use block is a proposal for an active way of connecting manufacturing to arts, technology and further to housing. Timber is one of the best materials to connect different programs into one for actualizing the new identity of Redhook and the best way to build and sustain it.
BIKE SHARE + LEARNING CENTER: Heavy Timber column and beam
CLT floors
Rule of Thirds
RESIDENTIAL: 23 story timber high rise residential building: Glulam column and beam, Cross Laminated Timber walls, and structural cores
axonometric diagram
This is included in every beginning photography and graphic design class because it is a quick and easy way to create a good composition. (Both Instagram and VSCO Cam include an option to show this grid in their camera view.)
6 | PRODUCING HOUSING | academic work | spring 2013
Divide your layout into thirds and then put your focal point at grid line intersections. Large images will take up multiple points, and if you want to include smaller, less important pieces, they can be placed at remaining points. Be careful to balance the visual weight of the page.
mech. room
storage
loading
storage
CLT/GLULAM PRODUCTION LINE
7
loading
storage
on site training room / office
DIGITAL FABRICATION showroom
small scale wood fabrication
art + fabrication store (co-op)
lobby info center
cafe
seminar room
BIKE SHARE
BIKE SHOP
BIKE SHOP
0
N
ground floor plan
LEARNING PATHWAY
8
16
32
second floor plan
community gallery studio studio studio
class room
2bed
class room
2bed
N
0
8
16
32
typical residential tower floor plan
N
0
8
16
32
community gallery, residential tower
8 | PRODUCING HOUSING | academic work | spring 2013
This composition creates hierarchy between the elements. The larger the image, the more important it should be.
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9
The Line | Danilo Udovicki and Larry Doll | Fall 2014
The Line | Danilo Udovicki and Larry Doll | Fall 2014
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8
The Line | Danilo Udovicki and Larry Doll | Fall 2014
The Line | Danilo Udovicki and Larry Doll | Fall 2014 42.48
RULE OF THIRDS
9
42.08 41.83
47.00
41.70
Usually best for landscape layouts.
47.20 47.26
42.00
B 47.25 38.16
41.70 47.50
38.70
OFFICE
A 42.00 6AM-11AM
41.90
RETAIL
C
HOUSING
11AM-4PM
[ THE LINE ]
46.60
46.29 46.00
SCHOOL
4PM-7PM
Symmetry
VOID
GYM
7PM-6AM
6m=18ft
+
Symmetry places equal weight on a page by centering the object in the composition along either axis or both.
5m=15ft 4m=12ft 3m=9ft
0 height
height of each microprogram 15m 10m 5m
dŚĞ >ŝŶĞ ǁĂƐ Ă ƐĞǀĞŶͲǁĞĞŬ ŵƵůƟͲƵƐĞ ƉƌŽũĞĐƚ with the goal of designing a ZAC or a city block in the ninth arondissement of Paris, France, between a park and a railway line. The program included 300 units of housing, ĂŶ ĞůĞŵĞŶƚĂƌLJ ƐĐŚŽŽů͕ ĂŶ ŽĸĐĞ ďƵŝůĚŝŶŐ͕ ĂŶĚ retail. tŝƚŚŝŶ ƚŚĞƐĞ ůĂƌŐĞƌ ƉƌŽŐƌĂŵƐ ǁĞ ŝĚĞŶƟĮĞĚ microgroprams that were shared (such as ƐŽĐŝĂů͕ ŵĞĞƟŶŐ͕ ĐŽƉLJ͕ ĂŶĚ ďƌĞĂŬ ƌŽŽŵƐͿ and those which were more individual and ƌĞƉĞĂƚĞĚ ;ĂƉĂƌƚŵĞŶƚƐ͕ ŽĸĐĞƐ͕ ĐůĂƐƐƌŽŽŵƐͿ͘ We organized all of the shared programs into ŽŶĞ ĐŽŶƟŶƵŽƵƐ ƐŝŶŐůĞͲůŽĂĚĞĚ ůŝŶĞ͕ ĂŶĚ ƚŚĞŶ ǁƌĂƉƉĞĚ ƚŚŝƐ ůŝŶĞ ĂƌŽƵŶĚ ƚŚĞ ƐŝƚĞ͕ ĮƫŶŐ ŝƚ into a general massing plan we made based ŽŶ ƐŝƚĞ ŝŶŇƵĞŶĐĞƐ ƐƵĐŚ ĂƐ ƐƵŶ͕ ǁŝŶĚ͕ ĂŶĚ noise.
46.70
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45.00 45.00 47.00
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41.90 4% 43.00
0 10m
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8m
10m 12.5m
12.5m 15m
15m
width of each microprogram
Partners: Bernardo Jimenez, David Castellano, Helene Mancaux
ƐĞĐƟŽŶ ͮ ƚŚƌŽƵŐŚ ŚŽƵƐŝŶŐ ĂŶĚ ƐĐŚŽŽů
There’s usually not much hierarchy displayed in this type of composition and is best for showcasing a single piece at a time.
ƐĞĐƟŽŶ ͮ ƚŚƌŽƵŐŚ ŽĸĐĞ
final model
CENTERED
Best for portrait layouts. However, notice how portrait layouts designed with symmetry can create a Rule of Thirds composition when seen as a spread.
Drawing Alignment There may be instances in which you design to eschew the rigid grid system in order to create a different relationship between your images. For instance, you may have section drawings that seem to unfold from the related edge of a model photograph. Or you may wish to imply other relationships through visual proximity.
Problem 1: CHANgE Located at the entry to Big Stacy Pool, the new changing rooms define the boundary between the city (street) and nature (park). While the proposed interior, defines the space of personal transformation from city dweller to swimmer.
Exercise 2+3: WAtEr (right) 1. Consider the flow of water. How can a surface shed water? Beading? Pooling? Rivulets? Attempt to create a specific character of water as it moves. 2. Consider the collection of water. How can water be held? Vessel? Bladder? Hold the same amount of water in different ways. 3. Combine water flow and collection. How can the initial experiments inspire water harvesting? 44
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DRAWING ALIGNMENT
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DESIGN ELEMENTS
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Hierarchy & Fields
Rebuilding homes, schools, and lives after disasters can take many years. Adaptive Classrooms are intended to last the length of this waiting period. Many areas that have suffered these natural disasters are likely to experience similar types of storms in the future. By lifting the classroom buildings off of the ground on piers, the height of these modular units can vary and adapt to the existing terrain. Those schools that are near coasts can be lifted above the flood level, preventing possible damage in the future.
Visual hierarchy is important because it guides the eye and therefore creates a better layout.
As rebuilding begins, Adaptive Classrooms will be aggregated together to form an entire school complex. In the case of Briarwood Elementary, two linked shells will support an entire grade level. Connecting the shells at the hinged science and art classroom creates enclosed courtyards which can be used for outdoor activities. As rebuilding continues, more people will move back to Moore and the school can be expanded by the addition of more units. Slight modifications can occur in the shell to accommodate support facilities such as a library and offices and to adjust to solar orientation. ADAPTIVE CLASSROOMS will also incorporate a reinforced storm shelter into the aggregated complex in order to prepare for possible future tornadoes and storms.
Start with your most important image and make it the largest one on the page. This size makes it the dominant focal point. Then add smaller supporting images that are complementary to the main image, and use them to balance the weight on the page. Be sure not to crowd the page. Use white space to enhance the hierarchy.
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Hierarchy
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1 I I I I I I I I I I I I 10
9 IIIIIIIIIIII
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DOMINANT FOCAL POINT
SECONDARY & TERTIARY ELEMENTS
Fields There are times when you have a series of images where you don’t want to assert a hierarchy of importance.
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For these, create a field by arranging them in a grid where they are all the same size. This arrangement treats the field as a single graphic element and removes any hierarchy between the parts of the field.
1 Iterative process models beginning with massing and progressing towards articulation of space
Printmaking studio with view of light well exterior work spaces
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FIELD AS SECONDARY ELEMENT
DOMINANT FOCAL POINT
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This project involved analyzing and manipulating the archetypal gable house to achieve a modest, picturesque addition to a prominent residence designed by architect Steven Ehrlich in the hills of west Los Angeles. By playing off the archetypal house the addition invokes a sense of “home” while also tying into the existing structure’s Japanese inspiration through its earthy materiality and focus on the outdoors.
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FIELD OF IMAGES AS DOMINANT FOCAL POINT
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DESIGN ELEMENTS
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White space White space is the portion of the page left blank of information—it is usually white, but can be another solid color. White space balances your composition between the positive elements (graphics) and negative space.
3d Model U+V-sections
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ND
STREET MARKET
2nd STREET MARKET is a fusion of an artisanal market and live-work community. The project responds to the city’s rapidly increasing population by offering density, while still preserving public green space. Program includes a sixteen story residential tower comprised of live-work units, an interior and exterior artisanal and fresh market, as well as industrial shops and kitchens for resident and community use. The bridge, which creates an exterior promenade lined with market stalls, serves as a connector between the existing 2nd Street shopping district and the future Seaholm commercial development and Austin Public Library
White space is essential because it gives your eyes a place to rest and creates a hierarchy of your images.
3d Model U-sections
The market’s form is derived from two local subcultures; the linear shopping district of South Congress and the sloped gathering spaces surrounding Barton Springs. By fusing the two, 2nd STREET MARKET creates a unique and engaging space while providing a valuable commodity in retail and housing.
Scatter Point Model
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L O C AT I O N : AUSTIN, TX
A portfolio that is too crowded and dense will fatigue a reviewer’s eyes more quickly, causing them to put it away sooner. There are a number of ways to utilize white space. Here are some examples: • White space as emptiness [1]
3 WHITE SPACE AS COLOR
INSTRUCTOR: LARRY DOLL YEAR: TWO; SPRING 2013 C O L L A B O R AT O R S : S H E L L E Y E VA N S LARUEN JONES
B
S H E L L E Y M C DAV I D
A
A’ 2
1 WHITE SPACE AS EMPTINESS
1_ Entry 1
Ground Plan
• White space as texture or lightened image [2]
B’
• White space as color [3]
2_ Lobby entrance
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• White space on a full spread using a variety of visual weight [4]
3_ Walkway connection
Section perspective of entry and meeting space
[ contents ]
• White space contrasted with full bleed [5]
Second Floor Plan
4 WHITE SPACE ON A FULL SPREAD THROUGH A VARIETY OF VISUAL WEIGHT
• White space as a full bleed image [6] You can use a variety of these techniques in your portfolio. Keep your design simple and use plenty of white space. Your layout should showcase your work, not itself.
“It’s not about your greatness as an architect, but about your compassion.” [ Samuel Mockbee ]
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rolling
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appropriation
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digital fabrication
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scale soco
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luminaire
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urban platform
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other works Top: Section through roof structure
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Bottom: Perspective from meadow Facing Page: 1/8” model 32
2 WHITE SPACE AS TEXTURE OR LIGHTENED IMAGE
5 WHITE SPACE CONTRASTED WITH FULL BLEED
*HTWÄYL
FALL 2011 CRITIC: JACK SANDERS With Johanna Spencer WINNER OF DESIGN EXCELLENCE AWARD
Project Loop’s Bastrop Fire Relief )LULÄ[ YLX\LZ[LK PU[LYHJ[P]L PUZ[HSProject Loop’s Bastrop Fire Relief SH[PVUZ 9LÅLJ[PUN VU [OL Z\JJLZZ VM )LULÄ[ YLX\LZ[LK PU[LYHJ[P]L PUZ[HS[OL 4HYMH 1LSS`ÄZO ^L YLHSPaLK [OH[ SH[PVUZ 9LÅLJ[PUN VU [OL Z\JJLZZ VM [OL O\TISL JHTWÄYL PZ [OL WLYMLJ[ interactive space. It is[OL 4HYMH 1LSS`ÄZO ^L YLHSPaLK [OH[ an object so [OL O\TISL JHTWÄYL PZ [OL WLYMLJ[ deeply and fondly ingrained in the interactive space. human collective consciousness. We It is an object so deeply and fondly ingrained in the ^HU[LK H JHTWÄYL MVY 7YVQLJ[ 3VVW collective conciousness. We Unfortunately, due tohuman the 2011 ^HU[LK H JHTWÄYL VY 7YVQLJ[ 3VVW ;L_HZ ^PSKÄYLZ H I\YU IHU ^HZ Z[PSS Unfortunately, due to the 2011 Texas PU LɈLJ[ :PUJL ^L JV\SKU»[ OH]L ^PSKÄYLZ H I\YU IHU ^HZ Z[PSS PU LMÄYL ^L [YPLK [V KLZPNU [OL UL_[ ILZ[ MLJ[ :PUJL ^L JV\SKU»[ OH]L ÄYL ^L thing. tried to design the next best thing. We realized that a large part of creating an interactive experience laid that in a large part of creatWe realized getting people to share unfainginananinteractive experience laid in TPSPHY L_WLYPLUJL :PUJL [OL JHTWÄYL getting people to share in an unfawas something familiar, we needed TPSPHY L_WLYPLUJL :PUJL [OL JHTWÄYL a device to encourage interaction. was something familiar, we needed To accomplish this, we arranged six a device to encourage interaction. benches in a circle. We a this, we arranged six To devised accomplish system in which sitting on a bench benches in a circle. We devised a illuminated the seat across you. sitting on a bench systemfrom in which To turn your own lightilluminated on, you had the seat across from you. to get someone to sitTo across fromown light on, you had to turn your you. Once all six benches were lit, to a sit acoss from you. get someone ZL]LU[O JLU[YHS ÄYL SP[ ;OPZ Z`TIVSOnce all six benches were lit, a sevized the act of working together enth, centraltolight lit. This symbolized I\PSK [OL ÄYL the act of working together to build H ÄYL
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6 WHITE SPACE AS A FULL BLEED IMAGE
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DESIGN ELEMENTS
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Color & Grayscale
vertical studio | spring 2012 michael benedikt location: the ladybird johnson wildflower center | austin, texas The ladybird Johnson wildflower center is a public botanical garden and research unit of the University of Texas at austin that consists entirely of plants native to central Texas. it is located ten miles southwest of downtown austin on 279 acres of undeveloped land that contains walking trails and educational exhibits. The wildflower center was chosen as the location for the project because of its serene quality and natural beauty, which aid in the practice of meditation. we were to pick a specific site anywhere on the grounds of the and design a zen Meditation center that included a meeting hall, cafeteria, guest rooms, apartments for staff, and a zendo for the practice of meditation.
Your portfolio should be visually cohesive, and the use of color is a large part of that.
section a section c
i was drawn to an area of the wildflower center that is away from the walking trails and fairly remote. it is accessible to visitors, but is in an area that has not been managed or developed, and is unlikely to see many pedestrians. To access the site, i chose to bypass the main entrance to the wildflower center, and use one of the old ranch roads that run across the property. Visitors would enter off Mopac expressway through a gate, and then travel down the ranch road to a parking lot, where they would leave their car and approach the Meditation center on foot.
Portfolios may be vibrant, neutral, or grayscale. Your use of color may have changed over time, so after compiling the projects you’ll present in your portfolio, you should review them together. Some pieces may need to be edited to aesthetically unify your portfolio. You may also choose to use color as a design element in addition to your drawings.
reflecting pond
zen MediTaTion cenTer
section B
The form of the Meditation center is long and thin, which emphasizes the horizontality of the site. The grouping of buildings is on a plinth that is flush with the ground at the entrance and remains level as the landscape slopes away towards the rear.
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i chose to create a definite boundary without making a complete enclosure. The entrance is through a large slot opening in a gibeon wall, which is offset by another wall. The boundary at the rear of the site is created by the plinth, which lets visitors to the wildflower center see in but prevents physical access. For the guests of the Meditation center, this suggests a vanishing point that blends in with the horizon line of the surrounding trees.
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groUnd leVel
i included water as a main feature of my design because of its calming qualities. a large reflecting pond divides the program of the Meditation center into three distinct zones – residential, public, and meditation. The zendo, where group meditation is practiced, is the focal point of the center and is placed in the middle of the reflecting pond to emphasize this. i also use the water to create a boundary around the zendo to minimize distraction for the meditators in the interior. The rest of the site is covered in grasses that are allowed to grow naturally.
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[ 1 ] guest rooms [ 2 ] staff apartments [ 3 ] lobby [ 4 ] cafeteria [ 5 ] zendo
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The Meditation center is joined together as a whole with a thin and lightweight saw-toothed roof structure that shades the buildings, but also lets indirect light in. 15
zen MediTaTion cenTer
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section d
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zen MediTaTion cenTer
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zen MediTaTion cenTer
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BOYS + GIRLS CLUB SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN SPRING 2013 The Boys and Girls Club organization exists to inspire and enable young people to realize their full potential by providing a safe place for learning and growth. Although this San Francisco Boys and Girls club would stand as one of eight other clubs in the San Francisco area, it is unique in its complete program and place within the city. It stands at the intersection of socioeconomic and neighborhood boundaries and within a tract of land that previously was home to a freeway. This location along with the aim of a safe environment that also promotes and encourages learning creates a rich opportunity to form a space that promotes a series of discoveries for children and visitors to the Boys and Girls club.
Fifth_Sixth Floor Plan
By incorporating different programmatic elements within a simple envelope the program spaces become free from the envelopes restraints, as well as create an opportunity for interaction between activities and people. This then creates different experiences and opportunities for discovery within and outside the envelope boundaries.
Section A-A’
Section B-B’
Section detail
NEUTRAL PALETTES
_Knowledge / Transparency / connecTion AXIS_one blends spaces as it infiltrates them. Beginning at the notoriously underused ‘hi-ggia’ between Goldsmith’s second floor studios and ending in the heart of Battle Hall at the foot of the grand stair, the proposed surface will thread together resources that have been unknowing neighbors for years
Goldsmith
MatLab
BattleHall
Plan
Construction Section
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Elevation
Axonometric Plan
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Section
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Facing Page: Perspective of downtown from boardwalk
Southern Elevation
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COLORFUL SPREADS
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DESIGN ELEMENTS
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Title Pages
poetics of building Design-Build Studio Location : Goose Island State Park, TX Awards : UTSOA Design Excellence 2015 Collaborators: Coleman Coker, Thomas Johnton, Luke Stevenson,
Distinguishing Between Projects To provide structure to your portfolio and help guide people through it, make sure that you use design to signal the start of a new project. The introduction to every project should be consistent. It should be visually clear through your design that you’re introducing a new project.
of the site to maintain privacy. They are made of monolithic bamboo-formed concrete and feature recessed planters. The effect of the indentations and the pattern of the bamboo breaks up the scale of the faade so the volumes don’t feel as overpowering. Tall sliding decorative steel gates are set on the outside of the public entrance, private entrance, and the two loading zones.
Katherine Eastman, Rachel Duggan, Kuan Liu, Huiming Zuo, Ruihua Cai, Teng Li, Celine Pinto
The bottom layer of the pale concrete fins on the courtyard roof are angled to the sun angle of the Winter Solstice. This means that the courtyard receives its maximum amount of direct sunlight during the Winter, and is almost entirely shaded during the blazing Austin summer.
Materiality played a largeLocated role on the Texas Gulf Coast, Goose Island State Park is a popular destination for all sorts in the development of formal of wildlife and outdoor enthusiasts, as well as strategy. Shellcrete is a historic an active oyster restoration site. The clients on building material on the site, this project needed an outdoor space to act as a and the remaining structures focal point for youth and community educawithin the park are deteriorating tional quickly. Our formal strategy wasprograms that would work just as well as fire circle for a large group of campers. The heavily influenced by the adesire design reflects that need for flexible space to showcase our updated final version of the material, as well asbytheproviding a minimal yet stable form. oyster shells themselves.
As part of film production, there is a set of spaces that require isolation from light and sound. We pushed these below To counterbalance the sequestered nature of the complex, we ground, achieving this isolation and also creating the grand inserted a large courtyard in the middle to act as a public plaza courtyard above. We inserted smaller courtyards that pierce for those working on site. It is large enough to be used by big the building to the lowest level, acting as lightwells for the groups, but it is also articulated and shaded to provide peaceful supplemental dressing rooms, greenrooms, and offices which respite from the stress of filming and editing. are also on the lower level. 12PM
GREENROOM STUDIOS
Nature is man’s primitive source of existence, and is endlessly creative and fantastic; and Austin is structured by a system of public trails and parks that act as an active recharge zone for residents. Likewise, Greenhouse Studios is centered around a large courtyard carpeted with grass, bounded by flowering walls, and covered by a protective screen roof. Immediate access to Nature from every part of the complex ensures that everyone can escape, recharge, and refresh whenever they need.
FILM PRODUCTION STUDIOS AND CAMPUS AUSTIN, TX, 2014 ACADEMIC; COLLABORATIVE 1PM CONCEPT: Nature is infused into all aspects of the filming process, enhancing filmmakers’ creativity by rejuvinating them at every turn.
Filming is an intensely productive and intensely private endeavor. The massive soundstages are placed on the edges WINTER SOLSTICE
EQUINOX
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This start to a new project can be done many ways:
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• Placing nothing but your title and project description on the title spread
The act of becoming enlightened is about breaking away from the mundane earthly experience. The same metaphor is used through the entry sequence. The zendo is about breaking your connection to the ground and making the connection ambiguous. From the exterior, you approach at an oblique angle so that the reflective glass along the bottom makes it appear as though the wildflower field continues uninterrupted beneath the zendo as it floats gently off the ground.
• Keeping the left page blank while showing a title and a parti on the right
Location: Austin, TX These drawings are the result of a careful analysis of existing walls for pattern, texture, and composition of material palette. The process of drawing in such a detailed process forces the mind to constantly shift between the macro and the micro, exploring relationships at all levels of composition and understanding.
back, so as you enter the building, you step through a sliver of light and feel as though you’re stepping over empty space. This is your second indication that you’re leaving mundane life behind, and prepares your thought for meditation.
GRAND DINING
The porch is pulled back from the zendo by 6", with a small threshold to carry you into the building. The roof is also pulled
ENTRY SEQUENCE
OFFICES
MANICURED GARDEN
LECTURE HALL
FLOATING ZENDO ZEN MEDITATION RETREAT CENTER LADY BIRD JOHNSON WILDFLOWER CENTER AUSTIN, TX, 2012 ACADEMIC
The practice of zen is quieting your mental state and clearing your thought until you reach enlightenment. During meditation, it is common practice in the zendo (meditation hall) to remove your shoes and sit cross-legged facing the wall with your eyes open and your hands resting on your knees. While meditating, you concentrate on your breathing to clear your mind.
CONCEPT: This zendo enhances one’s meditation by physically and visually lifting meditators off the ground and breaking their connection with the earth.
For designing the zen center, I concentrated on the zendo and two parts of the meditation experience: preparing and practicing.
WORKSHOP LOUNGE
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APPROACHING VIEW OF FLOATING ZENDO
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Make sure to attribute the work of others. This attribution can be done on a title page for collaborative projects, or with captions under specific images.
When placing your projects in an order, put your best project first and your second best project last. Establish a rhythm with the different length projects, alternating between longer and shorter sets of spreads.
pod hotel Undergraduate Design Studio Location: New York City, NY
In addition to the title, you may also want to include site location (Aspen, CO); studio level (Design IV, Advanced Design); project duration (5 weeks); professor (Bernard Voichysonk); and/or design partners (Peter Crow).
Generally, try to keep your projects to 2–3 spreads, with exceptions for longer projects like Tech Comm and Sound Building, or shorter design projects like introductory design exercises or special drawing projects.
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ZENDO
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Spread Count
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material studies in graphite
• Placing entire project description on title page
Some people use the text block on the beginning of a spread (i.e., on the far left) to indicate the start of a new project. However, you can also treat the entire spread as the announcement.
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• Using a full bleed image on title pages
• Using grayscale throughout your portfolio, but putting a full-color introductory image on the title spread
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SUMMER SOLSTICE
SHADE & SUNLIGHT IN COURTYARD
Humans are creatures of comfort over efficiency, except when it comes to the bottom line. Pod hotels are tiny, spatially efficient hotels that offer the bare minimum of space while still providing amenities. Our the taskhotel was to design our own The individual Podfullunits that shape version of these on ofthe NYC Highline were inspired by the gentle, flexiblehotels shelter hand drawings in plan and perspective, a willow tree and through the restrictive yet efficient keeping human protection of a contact case.theThe Podsscale haveas the guideline for our design. individual a bisected plan with thickThe opaque planesunit that developed first, then wasstructure repeatedand andprovide arranged to create a massing. contain most of the The resulting hotel accomodates 42 guests, and privacy. Circulation is achieved through sits through on top ofa sliding a restaurant glazed planes, either door situated behind the lobby, a banquet hall, and a cafe that sits at in front of the wash station or a side door in front of the bed. the level of the Highline, allowing for a visual dialogue at a close proximity. The massing of the units is shaped by an idea of a diptych of obstructed views working together to make a whole.
On the equinoxes and solstices, plywood coffins will be brought to the cemetery with the unclaimed. They can easily be assembled on site—each sheet cradles one of the bodies of the unclaimed. The plywood pieces interlock without fasteners and the system extends above the ground plane to create a small circular chapel. This chapel will be slightly elevated above grade and will both hold the unclaimed in its walls and form the chapel space. At the dedication, a tree will be planted in the middle as a memorial, creating a place where visitors can have a moment of protected silence for the dead. From their death, beautiful and peaceful life is grown. In this way, the tree will both metaphorically and literally reclaim the people—their bodies and plywood coffins will decompose and be renewed into the life of the tree. The coffins and chapels are made of plywood because it is easily manipulated, decomposable, and structural.
FOREST CEMETERY CITY CEMETERY FOR THE UNCLAIMED CHICAGO, IL, 2013 ACADEMIC EVERY the 3 MONTHS CONCEPT: By burying unclaimed dead in the ground with minimal60 BODIES plywood coffins and marked 60 PLYWOOD COFFINS with a tree, we can create a cemetery that bring them from the edge of society to a beloved centerpiece of their community.
COFFIN ASSEMBLY
5 FT
R: Elevational study
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BURIAL DATES
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PLANT BODIES
Each month in Chicago, there are roughly 20 people who 12 FT remain unclaimed at the city morgue. Often they remain unclaimed because they died at the edge of society— elderly, socially, or economically. I believe that, regardless of circumstances, each person deserves dignity, respect, and peace both during life and afterwards. The conceptual question driving my project is: How do we assert the precious value of the unclaimed?
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CENTERED TITLE AND TEXT SIGNAL NEW PROJECT
Nature renews itself constantly in cycles of growth and decay, and there could be a way for Nature to reclaim and assert the value of these unclaimed people. Operating at multiple scales, from the scale of the grave to the overall site, there is a strategy of renewal through natural processes, using trees as the main driver of this renewal process and plywood as the only building material.
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CHAPEL DEDICATED WITH TREE 46
SPRING SOLSTICE SUMMER EQUINOX AUTUMN SOLSTICE WINTER EQUINOX
RED MAPLE BEECH PIN OAK BIRCH BLACK TUPELO YELLOW POPLAR RED OAK BUTTERNUT HICKORY
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TREE MATURES AS BODIES AND CHAPEL DECOMPOSE
8–12 YEARS FULL DECOMPOSITION
BURIAL SEQUENCE
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FULL BLEED IMAGE ACROSS BOTH SPREADS ABOVE PROJECT TITLE SIGNALS NEW PROJECT
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DESIGN ELEMENTS
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Model Photos There are 4 styles:
FLASHING PVC VAPOR BARRIER MULTI-PLY MEMBRANE
CUSTOM STEEL FASCIA BLOCK AS NEEDED 4” STRUCTURAL STEEL STUD 3 1/2” BATT INSULATION CUSTOM DRIP GUTTER
RIGID INSULATION AIR BARRIER 3” COMPOSITE STEEL DECKING
• Black background [3]
SPRAY INSULATION
W12 X 35 STEEL SECTION, 16’-0” O.C. MC8 X 20 STEEL SECTION
• White background [4] BLOCK AS NEEDED
• Neutral background [1]
IRRIGATION PIPE DRIP EDGE STEEL GROMMET
SUSPENDED WOOD CEILING
• In context [2]
INTERIOR
EXTERIOR
Do not use photos that show your studio or other clutter in the background. The background needs to be either neutral or contextual. 1” INSULATED GLASS
WT3 X 4.5 STEEL FIN, 4’-0” O.C.
Left: final presentation model showing the site context Opposite page: S-N section model
2” X 8” STEEL TUBE COLUMN, 16’-0” O.C.
14 | GALVESTON MARITIME MUSEUM | academic work | fall 2012
You should retouch every model photo in Photoshop. (See Photoshopping Models p.64)
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SOIL AND GRAVEL MIX INTERIOR TRAY BENT STEEL TRAY INTERNAL TRAY DRAIN
1/4” STEEL PLATE 3/4” WOOD FINISHED FLOOR CUSTOM STEEL CHANNEL 3/4” PLYWOOD SUBFLOOR 2” X 4” SLEEPER WATER BARRIER 4” CONCRETE SLAB 3” COMPOSITE STEEL DECKING
2” STONE FILL LIMESTONE PAVER BOND COAT 1” STEEL GRATE CUSTOM STEEL TRENCH DRAIN
DETAIL OF GREENROOM WALL WITH WATERING SYSTEM & DRAINAGE 14
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1 NEUTRAL BACKGROUND
3 BLACK BACKGROUND: COLOR AND MONOCHROMATIC
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2 IN CONTEXT
4 WHITE BACKGROUND
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TYPOGRAPHY
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Fonts Serif vs. San Serif There are two major types of font faces for text: serifs and san serifs. (There are also other decorative types like scripts, gothic, etc). Serifs are fonts with decorative flourishes, like Times New Roman, Garamond, and Georgia. San serifs are plain, like Helvetica, Arial, and Century Gothic.
Design-Build Studio Location : Goose Island State Park, TX Awards : UTSOA Design Excellence 2015
Spring 2014 I 18 weeks Design VI Professor Judy Birdsong
This comprehensive studio dealt with programmatic, environmental, and structural design, all while creating a responsive form. The building is defined as a bowling alley/roller rink, with supplemental programs. The resultant design is of prominent sectional quality, due to the dynamic movement of the programs. Massive folded volumes, interacting through shears and connectivity, follow programmatic and building function. Materials play a dominant role: thick, dark, smooth concrete as defining volumes, wood as bowling/roller skating designation, and lighter, textured concrete as exterior space. Solar studies, HVAC calculations, exit path strategies, structural grid explorations, and detailed wall sections are some examples of topics covered.
Serif San Serif
Traditionally, serifs are best for paragraphs of text because the flourishes help our eyes understand the shape of the characters more quickly. San serifs are traditionally used for larger lettering. However, they can both be used for either text or headings.
Collaborators: Coleman Coker, Thomas Johnton, Luke Stevenson, Katherine Eastman, Rachel Duggan, Kuan Liu, Huiming Zuo, Ruihua Cai, Teng Li, Celine Pinto
Located on the Texas Gulf Coast, Goose Island State Park is a popular destination for all sorts of wildlife and outdoor enthusiasts, as well as an active oyster restoration site. The clients on this project needed an outdoor space to act as a focal point for youth and community educational programs that would work just as well as a fire circle for a large group of campers. The final design reflects that need for flexible space by providing a minimal yet stable form.
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Use Only One or Two Font Faces
Project Title
Using multiple fonts visually complicates your design. It’s the sign of an over-excited amateur.
Professor, Semester
• If you choose to use two font faces, pick one serif and one san serif.
poetics of building
[ rolling ]
Typography is an essential part of your portfolio’s design, but there are a couple of basic rules to follow to keep it looking professional.
Location
ONE FONT FACE: SAN SERIF
Project Title
TWO FONT FACES: SAN SERIF TITLE, SERIF TEXT
Location Professor, Semester
Project Title Location Professor, Semester
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Seattle Public Library
Seattle Public Library OMA/Rem Koolhaas Seattle, WA 2004
OMA/Rem Koolhaas Seattle, WA 2004
Ellande dic tota voloreperion pelibus. Am, cusa vel ellacit enienduntio voluptur, quo te pe litam sequia nemolor aut quat issequi teste pos ut la pro veliquos simus. Acit, tempos adios aut as eaque enimilla pedNim fuga. Rum quam ut fugia vendunt earchil iquiducia sequi doluptaque solorum. ONE FONT FACE: SAN SERIF
Ellande dic tota voloreperion pelibus. Am, cusa vel ellacit enienduntio voluptur, quo te pe litam sequia nemolor aut quat issequi teste pos ut la pro veliquos simus. Acit, tempos adios aut as eaque enimilla pedNim fuga. Rum quam ut fugia vendunt iquiducia sequi doluptaque solorum rectat. TWO FONT FACES: SERIF TITLE, SAN SERIF TEXT
Seattle Public Library
Seattle Public Library
Ellande dic tota voloreperion pelibus. Am, cusa vel ellacit enienduntio voluptur, quo te pe litam sequia nemolor aut quat issequi teste pos ut la pro veliquos simus. Acit, tempos adios aut as eaque enimilla pedNim fuga. Rum quam ut fugia vendunt earchil iquiducia sequi doluptaque solorum rectat eum fugiae.
Ellande dic tota voloreperion pelibus. Am, cusa vel ellacit enienduntio voluptur, quo te pe litam sequia nemolor aut quat issequi teste pos ut la pro veliquos simus. Acit, tempos adios aut as eaque enimilla pedNim fuga. Rum quam ut fugia vendunt iquiducia sequi doluptaque solorum rectat.
ONE FONT FACE: SERIF
TWO FONT FACES: SAN SERIF TITLE, SERIF TEXT
OMA/Rem Koolhaas Seattle, WA 2004
OMA/Rem Koolhaas Seattle, WA 2004
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TYPOGRAPHY
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Text Make it Legible (i.e. Larger than you’d think)
Heavy Water Fall 2013 | Professor Coleman Coker
Feedback from the men and women who hold the keys to the internship castle: “Have mercy on us and our older eyes!”
The Museum of Old and New Art (MONA) in Hobart, Tasmania is situated on a peninsula surrounded by the Derwent Estuary. Once one of the most contaminated estuaries in the world, its shores are the site of multiple manufacturers who had formerly considered the estuary a dumping ground: Nyrstar Zinc, Cadbury Chocolate, Norske Skog Paper Mill, and the Hobart sewage treatment plant. Residents cannot swim in much of the water along the Derwent, and the government issues regular warnings to prevent people from eating the fish in the estuary due to the heavy metals in the water. MONA’s yearly festival of music and art, MONA FOMA, sought to address the issue of heavy metal contamination, calling artists, architects, scientist, and heavy metal musicians together to create works to address this issue.
• Make your text dark (if not black) and readable Some offices will photocopy your resumé, so use font colors that copy well. Small text may look better to you and fit your design better, but make sure to run it past a variety of people to make sure it’s legible to eyes a couple of decades older than yours.
Hobart, Tasmania, Australia website: heavywater-mona.com studio design team:
Alexandra Krippner, Shelby Blessing, Danuta Dias, Shelley Evans, Andrew Houston, Lauren Jones, Kye Killian, Jorge Martinez, Morgan Parker, Mitchell Peterson, David Sharratt, Katie Summers
Heavy Water was designed to reconnect visitors to their environments through multi-sensory experience. A dark zinc box appears to float above the estuary, suspended above walls of water that hide a wooden deck and bench inside. The falling water creates an edge of turbulence, oxygenating the water. As one approaches the curtain of water, sensors part the wall to allow passage into the interior. At only seven feet above the floating deck, the proximity of the box overhead is designed to convey the sense that the estuary is suffocating. An oculus at the center provides a moment of relief, bringing light and air into the room of water walls. The concrete surface of the bench references the 8cm of sediment that currently holds a large percent of the contaminated metal capped at the bottom of the estuary.
Observation Blind Buildings shelter people. This structure was designed to strategiacally cover it’s users so that viewers can observe birds without being disruptive. After researching bird tendencies and discovering where different species perch and what they fear, I was able to design appropriately for the bird blind as it progressively approached water. Bird inhabitation changes due to, plant vegetation, soil conditions, and connection to water. At the water’s edge, the bird blind conceals the user most heavily. As the blind gets further away from the water, the covering dissipates, allowing for more open views on the site where birds are less skittish. A grid was placed in the design in order to create a system that could provide logic, while allowing for manipulation and variation. This grid guided me in designing both the structure and the aesthetics of the birding shelter.
MONA has plans to build a versionBLIND of Heavy Water with a projected OBSERVATION + BIRDING CENTER completion date of late 2014/early 2015. Model: David Sharratt Photograph: Alexandra Krippner Render: Shelley Evans
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THE SPREAD ON THE LEFT IS EASIER TO READ THAN THE LONG ONE ON THE RIGHT. YOUR EYES HAVE A HARD TIME TRACKING ACROSS WIDE PARAGRAPHS TO FIND THE NEXT LINE TO READ.
• Make sure your text is large enough to be legible when read as a PDF on-screen.
Basic Rules • Don’t make text boxes wider than 5 in. When text blocks get too long, our eyes have a difficult time going from the end of a line and finding the start of the next line quickly. • Turn off hyphenation in your paragraphs! • Where possible, try not to leave single words alone on a line at the end of a paragraph. Those are called orphans. • Both justified and ragged text are ok, and the decision comes down simply to preference. • Do not center align large bodies of text. It makes it hard to read, and generally looks sloppy with the lines all ending differently. If you want your text to feel centered, justify the text and then center it. • DO NOT MAKE YOUR TEXT ALL CAPS. • Do not expand the kerning or tracking. • Do not use italics for large bodies of text. Caps, kerning, and italics can be okay for titles or short quotes, but not for bodies of text—they make your text too difficult to read.
Austin nAturAl History MuseuM South Harbor Competition
The natural history museum on town lake, housing special dinosaur skeletons found locally in Austin, takes advantage of the urban downtown and the activity of the natural landscape at town lake. The museum uses existing paths to create intersections between parking different types of pedestrians, leading them through and around the exterior of the museum. The building is a dynamic extension of the dichotomy of downtown Austin, using variation of section to root itself into the ground and become the mediator between the street, the hike and bike trail, and the lake.
Helsinki, Finland
The competition called for ideas on how to redesign the historic, cultural and commercial area of Helsinki’s South Harbor. Working with Impossible Productions Ink principle, Veronika Schmid, we envisioned bringing the people to the sea and the sea to the people through elongated piers and shoreline water features. Using paracloud, a paneling program, parametric designs for the water pools, piers, parking, trams, bikes, and cars were generated. The entire site was then mapped and built in 3dsmax. Finally the proposed design was built in UDK, a video game software, to create an interactive experience for the competition’s jurors. The final design’s complex network of bridges and piers hoped to enliven the area with pedestrian traffic while navigating cars above and around the area. Boat access was a top priority and parameter on the design. The final product was a vibrant network of all modes of transportation efficiently woven together.
The museum is comprised of three main exhibits: living botany and plant origin exhibit, aquatic dinosaurs, and finally the land dinosaur exhibit. This chronological organization allows the inhabitant to descend from the street entry into the dim lobby, enter into the low-lit realm of the greenhouse, and emerge back out of the ground as the exhibits continue to the large, open and day-lit land dinosaur exhibit. The exterior circulation surrounds the exhibits and allows the pedestrian to interact with the building and as well as with the Water pools exhibits indirectly, serving not only the paid customer, but also the just as important passerby. The weaving ALL CAPS ARE FINE FOR THEY FATIGUE YOUR EYES FOR andTITLES interstitial AND nature CAPTIONS, of the paths and BUT trail envelope pedestrian in the design and DON’T create anACTUALLY active LONG PARAGRAPHS. THIS the IS BECAUSE OUR EYES READ EACH LETTER experience.
IN A WORD, EYES RECOGNIZE WORDS BASED ON THEIR SHAPE. ALL CAPS DEFY YOUR EYE’S ABILITY TO DO THIS AND THEREFORE Instructor: Judith BirdsongTEXT IN ALL CAPS TAKES LONGER TO READ. Spring 2013
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Piers
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TYPOGRAPHY
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Designing Your Text Organizing with Paragraph Styles
SHINGLES DOWELS
You shouldn’t need more than 5 types of text in your portfolio:
EYELETS
2X4 R=4
• Main title [1]
BONDED LOGIC INSULATION R=19
• subhead [2]
LABELS 4
FABRIC NETTING
• text [3]
WHITE FLANNEL R=5 1X2
• caption [5] • label [4] The best way to handle these 5 types of text are with Paragraph Styles, which will keep your portfolio consistent and make your life a lot easier. You can find more information on them and how to use them in the second half of this guide in the section on InDesign.
COPPER SHEATHING R=2 VAPOR BARRIER R=2 PLYWOOD R=0.63
CAPTION 5
ASSEMBLY
Consistent Labels If you used the same font for all of your graphic work throughout school, congratulations! Your labels are probably very consistent. However, if you took the opportunity to use a different font on every project, your portfolio may look a bit chaotic. It is worth the time to go through and re-label your drawings, either in the native drawing or in InDesign, with a consistent label style. It will unify portfolio, as opposed to looking like a collection of independent projects.
1 MAIN TITLE 2 SUBHEAD
FLUTTERING FAÇADE EXTERIOR WALL ASSEMBLY AUSTIN, TX, 2012 ACADEMIC; COLLABORATIVE CONCEPT: Wall assembly reacting to and displaying immediate microclimate conditions, similar to leaves in the wind and rain.
3 TEXT
One of my favorite memories of summer is laying in my warm bed, watching rain filter through the forest canopy after a rainstorm outside my window. When we were asked to develop an innovative wall assembly, my partner and I chose to create a façade that would respond to wind and rain in a similar way, giving the impression of a fluttering façade mimicking the summer leaves and showing the weather. The shingles are made of two shingles glued to a coupling nut at a 30° angle and then threaded onto a zinc rod. The coupling nut allows rotation, and the threads prevent lateral movement. These are then set into eyelets drilled into the main structure. Copper sheets are screwed on top of the rain barrier, reflecting little flashes of light as the shingles move. RANGE OF MOTION
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TYPOGRAPHY
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Page Numbers
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The Line | Danilo Udovicki and Larry Doll | Fall 2014
The Line | Danilo Udovicki and Larry Doll | Fall 2014
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OFFICE
Your portfolio must include page numbers. The two best places are in the outside corners. However, if you’re trying to establish a datum across the page, anywhere along the outside edge will do.
RETAIL
6AM-11AM
[ THE LINE ]
HOUSING
11AM-4PM
dŚĞ >ŝŶĞ ǁĂƐ Ă ƐĞǀĞŶͲǁĞĞŬ ŵƵůƟͲƵƐĞ ƉƌŽũĞĐƚ with the goal of designing a ZAC or a city block in the ninth arondissement of Paris, France, between a park and a railway line. The program included 300 units of housing, ĂŶ ĞůĞŵĞŶƚĂƌLJ ƐĐŚŽŽů͕ ĂŶ ŽĸĐĞ ďƵŝůĚŝŶŐ͕ ĂŶĚ retail. tŝƚŚŝŶ ƚŚĞƐĞ ůĂƌŐĞƌ ƉƌŽŐƌĂŵƐ ǁĞ ŝĚĞŶƟĮĞĚ microgroprams that were shared (such as ƐŽĐŝĂů͕ ŵĞĞƟŶŐ͕ ĐŽƉLJ͕ ĂŶĚ ďƌĞĂŬ ƌŽŽŵƐͿ and those which were more individual and ƌĞƉĞĂƚĞĚ ;ĂƉĂƌƚŵĞŶƚƐ͕ ŽĸĐĞƐ͕ ĐůĂƐƐƌŽŽŵƐͿ͘ We organized all of the shared programs into ŽŶĞ ĐŽŶƟŶƵŽƵƐ ƐŝŶŐůĞͲůŽĂĚĞĚ ůŝŶĞ͕ ĂŶĚ ƚŚĞŶ ǁƌĂƉƉĞĚ ƚŚŝƐ ůŝŶĞ ĂƌŽƵŶĚ ƚŚĞ ƐŝƚĞ͕ ĮƫŶŐ ŝƚ into a general massing plan we made based ŽŶ ƐŝƚĞ ŝŶŇƵĞŶĐĞƐ ƐƵĐŚ ĂƐ ƐƵŶ͕ ǁŝŶĚ͕ ĂŶĚ noise.
SCHOOL
4PM-7PM
VOID
GYM
7PM-6AM
If your entire layout is centered, you may want to center the page numbers along the top or the bottom.
6m=18ft
+
5m=15ft 4m=12ft 3m=9ft
0 height
height of each microprogram 15m 10m 5m
0 width 5m
Do not put page numbers along the gutter (the inside of the spread)! No one will ever see the page numbers, and you’ll just frustrate anyone trying to find them.
+
8m
Partners: Bernardo Jimenez, David Castellano, Helene Mancaux
10m 12.5m
12.5m 15m
15m
width of each microprogram
PAGE NUMBER OUTSIDE TOP CORNER
“ d r aw i n g s s p e n d t h e i r l i v e s i n t h e da r k ” This project is a museum design for the new Drawing Institute at the Menil Campus in Houston, Texas. I was inspired by something the director said to our studio while she was giving us a tour of the museum. She was explaining how drawings usually don’t get the attention they deserve in the art and exhibit world because they are usually treated as preliminary sketches for other works, like painting and sculpture. Thus, she said, “Drawings spend their lives in the dark.” This studio was also an exploration in light, and strategies to achieve different light qualities. For these exercises, I focused on achieving high contrasts of light and shadow. I was highly influenced by Jun’ichiro Tanizaki’s In Praise of Shadows, which extols the beauty of darkness. If drawings spend their lives in the dark, what better condition to study than shadows--the absence of light? The vision for the Menil Drawing Institute focuses on this exhuming of drawings from darkness--forgotten archives and collections--and bringing them to the light--exhibition. The contrast of light and shadow creates the dramatic experience of the museum. vertical studio spring 2013 professor: joyce rosner
modeled studies of light and shadow 4
5
PAGE NUMBER OUTSIDE BOTTOM CORNER
Materiality played a large role in the development of formal strategy. Shellcrete is a historic building material on the site, and the remaining structures within the park are deteriorating quickly. Our formal strategy was heavily influenced by the desire to showcase our updated version of the material, as well as the oyster shells themselves.
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PAGE NUMBER CENTERED BOTTOM
B. Making Your Portfolio in InDesign Setting up Your File 36
Workflow for Photoshop, Illustrator & InDesign
38
Starting a New InDesign File
40
Master Pages
46 Guidelines 48
Page Numbers
50 Styles
EXAMPLES EXCERPTED FROM PRP PORTFOLIOS BY: JEFFREY BLOCKSIDGE BROOKS CAVENDER CLAIRE EDELEN TESS ENGLISH JAMIE EPLEY SHELLEY EVANS MARY HOHLT JUNE JUNG K. ALEXANDRA KRIPPNER JOSHUA LAMBDEN GORDON LEE CAITLIN MCCUNNEY SHELLEY MCDAVID CLAIRE MILLER MARK NORDBY ARIEL PADILLA BARRON PEPER ANNA ROE SUNNY SCHNEBERGER TRISTAN WALKER ANDREW WILSON
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Paragraph Styles
54
Character Styles
56
Object Styles
58 Swatches 60
Swatch Libraries
62
Align palette
64
Photoshopping Models
Preparing your File to Print 66
Spell Check
68
First, Packaging
70
Image File Rules
72
PDF Settings for Printing
74
PDF Settings for Email
36
SETTING UP YOUR FILE
Workflow for Photoshop, Illustrator, & InDesign Adobe products were created to work together in a certain order. Your work will look better if you work this way, and it’ll be easier on you.
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Revit, Rhino, AutoCAD, etc
EXPORT
Workflow for Drawings • Revit/Rhino/AutoCAD/etc creates the line drawing • Line drawing gets imported into Illustrator and edited • Illustrator drawing gets copied into Photoshop as a Smart Object
IMPORT
• Photoshop lets you add texture, photos, color, etc • Place Photoshop image into InDesign to arrange your portfolio • Print
Smart Objects
Illustrator
EDIT & SAVE DOUBLE-CLICK TO EDIT
COPY
Smart Objects are the keystone to the whole process, and a brilliant solution by Adobe to mesh vector and raster information without degradation on either side.
PASTE AS SMART OBJECT
Smart Objects contain all your vector information and keep it as vector information that is saved within your Photoshop file. It is not saved as a separate file. • Export from Revit, Rhino, AutoCAD, etc., to either a PDF format or a .dwg that can read by Illustrator • Open drawing in Illustrator, apply line weights, add color, etc., • COPY (Cmd + C for Mac, or Ctrl + C for PC) everything you want to move to Photoshop
Photoshop
SAVE
PLACE
1
InDesign
• Open Photoshop and create a new document • PASTE (Cmd + P for Mac, or Ctrl + P for PC) • In the dialog window, select “Smart Object” [1]
• Photoshop your image If you need to edit the vector portion: • Double-click on the Smart Object Layer • Edit it in Illustrator and SAVE Do not edit the original file since it is not linked, and do not try SAVE AS to save it somewhere else, unless you’re meaning to save a back-up copy
Printed Portfolio
38
SETTING UP YOUR FILE
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Starting a New InDesign File Facing Pages • Yes. [1] This option allows you to print double sided and have spreads. 1
Page Size This is up to you. [2] 2
SLUG [7]: DON’T NEED
Columns You can set up columns here [3]. These dimensions act like guides, but I recommend using actual guidelines (see Guidelines section), which are much easier to edit and use. (Columns would be best used when designing something that is text-heavy, like a newspaper.)
Margins
BLEED [6]: AT LEAST 0.125"
3
PAGE EDGE MARGIN [4]: AT LEAST 0.25"
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• No smaller than 0.25in. [4] • Inside margin needs extra room for binding [5] You can let images bleed off the edges if you’d like, but anything you don’t want cropped off the page should be 0.25in or more from the edge. Leave the inside margin (official name: gutter) wide enough to accommodate for binding. This amount varies depending on binding: spiral bound, perfect bound, or some other type.
Bleed • No smaller than 0.125in. [6] If you have ANY images that bleed off the edge of the page, you need them to bleed at least 0.125in. This dimension is to account for chopping/aligning errors when printing. If you never print your portfolio and only PDF it, you don’t need bleed. However, better safe than sorry, right?
Slug You don’t need this setting [7]. (This is for typesetters to leave notes for the printers in a designated space that won’t be printed.)
INSIDE MARGIN [5]: EXTRA SPACE FOR BINDING
6 7
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
Master Pages
41 1
2 3
4
5
6
WINDOW > PAGES Master pages make your life easier! Use them to make your portfolio structured and cohesive. Master pages are templates for your normal pages. You can create as many Master pages as you need.
Use Master pages for: • Guidelines: so all your images will be aligned correctly—especially important for PDF portfolios where shifts in alignment are especially noticeable • Your text boxes: ensuring their placement will be consistent • Page numbers • Any other elements you want to show on multiple pages
How to Create a Master Page • Click the menu button on the PAGES palette [1] • The menu [2] will pop up • Click on “New Master…” [3]
EXAMPLE OF HOW MASTER CAN BE APPLIED AND THEN EDITED
• In the dialog window that opens [4}, name your master pages and choose whether or not you want it based on another master page, press OK • InDesign will automatically open the new master pages for you to edit • As you edit, you’ll notice that box edges are dotted instead of solid, indicating it’s an element from a Master page
How to Apply a Master to a Page • Either open the page you want to change, or just select it (or multiple pages) in the PAGES palette • Click the menu button on the PAGES palette [1] • Click on “Apply Master to Pages…” [5] • Choose which Master you want applied, edit page selection if needed [6] On the next page, I show an example of how you might want to use multiple Master pages for your portfolio. A-MASTER PAGE
EDITED PAGE BASED ON A-MASTER
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
43
Master Pages Multiple/Inherited Masters
2
1
Master pages can also be applied to other Master pages. This application can be useful when you need multiple Masters in a project.
2 3
In this example, I need one template for my Title Pages and another template for an extended Resume section. But both templates need to have page numbers and the same basic structure.
4
• I created the A-Master to hold my guidelines and the page numbers. [1] • I created T-Title Master and applied the A-Master to it. Then, I added the text boxes and other elements where I wanted them. [2] • I did the same for the R-Resume Master. [3] • I could then apply the T-Title and R-Resume masters to various pages within the portfolio. [4]
TITLE-MASTER: INHERITS PAGE NUMBERS & GUIDELINES FROM A MASTER; SETS UP TITLE AND TEXT BOXES & STYLES FOR TITLE PAGES.
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1
A-MASTER: SETS UP THE PAGE NUMBERS AND GUIDELINES FOR ENTIRE PORTFOLIO
TITLE PAGES: ACTIVATE TEXT BOX TO INSERT CUSTOM TEXT; OTHERWISE, LEAVE EVERYTHING IN PLACE.
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
45
Master Pages Editing Elements from a Master
LOCKED TO MASTER PAGE
When you’re editing a normal page, elements inherited from the Master page will show a dotted blue outline. These elements are locked and the software won’t let you edit them unless you unlock them.
UNLOCKED TEXT AND EDITED
Leave them locked until you need to edit them. Unlocking them will also detach them from the Master page—meaning, each quality of an object you change on the page will become unlinked to the original element on the Master page, and any further changes to it won’t propagate to the layout page. For example, if you unlock the text of a text box and change the text, text from the Master page is no longer linked. Any change to the text in that box on the Master page will not be propagated to that specific text box on the normal page. However, if you don’t move the text box, the location is still linked, and moving the text box on the Master page will still move the text box on the layout page.
1
HIDES ALL ELEMENTS FULLY LINKED TO THE MASTER PAGES UNLINKS ALL ELEMENTS ON A PAGE FROM THE MASTER PAGE
To unlock an element for editing: 2
• Click the lock icon Once the element is unlocked, it will revert to the solid blue outline.
Re-link/Reset Elements to Original State If you unlock an element to edit and then later need to reset it, it’s easy to do so. For example, maybe you unlocked an element to make a single spread work better, then later you redesign your portfolio and your Master pages and discover a few elements were unlinked to the Master pages and didn’t move where they should. To reset element: • Select the element • Use the PAGES Palette menu to select “Remove Selected Local Overrides” [2] • ALL edits you made to the element will be lost
APPLIES NEW MASTER OR YOU CAN SELECT SAME MASTER TO RESET PAGE COMPLETELY
RE-LINKS ELEMENT TO THE MASTER PAGE AND DELETES ALL OF YOUR EDITS BREAKS ALL LINKS TO THE ELEMENT ON THE MASTER PAGE
Reset Entire Page Sometimes you just need to start a page over. There are 2 ways to reset the entire page back to the Master page (deleting all edits you’ve made to the page). Select a spread or page in the PAGES palette (if you select just one page of a spread, it will still apply the override to both pages on the spread) Then: • Use the PAGES palette menu to select “Remove Selected Local Overrides” [2] OR: • Use the PAGES palette menu to select “Apply Master to Pages…” [1] • Choose the Master, designate the pages, and click OK
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
47
Guidelines Use guidelines to set up your grid and other important datums for your layout. Guidelines are datums, which do not print, that you can use to quickly align images and text. They appear in InDesign as cyan lines across the page, and they disappear when you’re in Preview or Presentation mode. (Use Shift+“W” as a quick shortcut to alternate between view modes.) There are two ways to create guides:
1
2
3
• Click on the rulers along the edge of your window [1] (press Cmd + R to make them appear), and drag them into place [2] • When selected, you can fine tune their placement in the TRANSFORM palette. [3] OR: • Click the Layout menu at the top [4] • Select Create Guides [5] • Fill in your choices and click OK [6] When you draw or drag new text boxes or object boxes, they will automatically snap to the guidelines as you get close to them. 4
5
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48
SETTING UP YOUR FILE
Page Numbers
49 1
TYPE > INSERT SPECIAL CHARACTER > MARKERS > CURRENT PAGE NUMBER InDesign allows you to insert a special character for the page numbers, which allows it to automatically number each page. This means: you don’t have to manually number your pages or double check them when you move spreads around!
Inserting Automatic Page Numbers Insert your page numbers onto your Master Pages, and that will ensure that they show up on every page in the same spot. Inserting page numbers is very easy: • Open your Master pages
2
• Create a text box where you want your page number to show up [2]
THIS IS WHAT THE PAGE NUMBER LOOKS LIKE ON A MASTER PAGE. THE PAGE NUMBER APPEARS AS AN “A” ON THE MASTER PAGE.
• Select the Type Menu [1] • Insert Special Character > Markers > Current Page Number [3] • Format your page number with the right font, color, and size • Double check that your text box is big enough to handle multiple digits and wide fonts as your page count grows. It will show up as the letter A on the Master pages, and show as numbers on the actual pages.
Numbering and Section Options It’s possible to edit the use of your page numbers even further. This option probably is unnecessary for your portfolio, but may be useful for another project. You can find these settings under the PAGES palette menu: Numbering & Section Options.
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
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Styles Styles let you set up the look and feel of text and objects in a single place. When you edit the format of a style, all paragraphs/text/objects with that style applied will be updated to the new format. You can make edits in just one place instead of going through paragraph by paragraph or object by object in your entire portfolio. This method is easier on you and also ensures your entire portfolio will remain consistent, no matter how many times you tweak your design.
Paragraph Styles vs. Character Styles Paragraph styles and Character Styles both apply to text within a text box. Paragraph Styles include all character and paragraph settings in one style and let you apply to it an entire paragraph. You apply the style to paragraphs throughout your portfolio—like titles, text, captions, labels. They include all information about the character and paragraph settings, and will overwrite whatever formatting you have previously applied to the paragraph.
EXAMPLE:
DINOT, REGULAR 11PT NO HYPHENATION SPACE AFTER: 0.125IN
PARAGRAPH STYLE: TEXT CHARACTER STYLES 1 AND 2
CHARACTER STYLE 2 ALL CAPS TINT: 65%
Character Styles only include character settings and are applied to small snippets of text within a paragraph. Character Styles include only what will be different. So you can have a character style that is bold and tinted 50%, and it will only overwrite those characteristics that are specified.
Object Styles Object styles are for non-text elements like lines, arrows, boxes, etc. They are helpful for elements you will use over and over again.
Text (Paragraph style)
Lauta ipsam vene et rerumet quo te volut magnatas Character Style 1 aped quiati berciis aut lit odit magnatet hicit, vit ilis ad ma inum et moluptiam CHARACTER STYLE 2 pa que pratur senem atin reprovit doloreium estibus ium faces idi consequam eumquo id quo il minti ut es nos ilit provit lit deribustem.
EXAMPLES:
THICK GRAY OUTLINE COLOR: BLACK, TINT: 20%, STROKE WT: 2PT
These are explained in depth on the following pages. BLUE ARROW COLOR: CYAN, TINT: 25%, STROKE WT: 2PT; LINE END: CURVED ARROW
CHARACTER STYLE 1 [FONT], BOLD CYAN 100%
52
SETTING UP YOUR FILE
Paragraph Styles
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WINDOW > STYLES > PARAGRAPH STYLES Paragraph styles are, hands down, one of the very best features of InDesign. Use them for 99% of your text.
How to Set Them Up They’re so easy! The paragraph style will contain all info from the PARAGRAPH and CHARACTER palettes and more. • Set up a paragraph of text how you want it to look • Open your PARAGRAPH STYLES palette [1] • Make sure your cursor is in the paragraph of text you want your style to be based on • Click the “Create new style” button [2] at the bottom • Rename it At this point the style has been created, but isn’t applied to the paragraph you used to create it. When your cursor is in a paragraph with a style applied to it, InDesign will highlight style in the PARAGRAPH STYLES palette.
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How I’ve Used Paragraph Styles Here This page uses 4 of my 5 paragraph styles for the document: • A Head: “Paragraph Styles” at the top • subhead: “How They Work” etc • text: for normal paragraphs • text list: for these bulleted lists
How to Apply Them • Click anywhere in a paragraph—doesn’t matter if you highlight all of it, a portion of it, or just place your cursor in it • Click on the paragraph style (in the palette’s list) that you want applied
Your portfolio shouldn’t require any more than what I’ve used here.
A Head
• IT WILL APPLY TO THE ENTIRE PARAGRAPH • IT WILL DISCARD ALL OTHER FORMATTING, including italics and bolds... You will need to put those in again after applying the style
How to Edit the Paragraph Style To edit them: • Just double-click on their name in the PARAGRAPH STYLES palette. • Edit in the new window [3] and press OK
subhead text • text list CAPTIONS
ALL PARAGRAPH STYLES FOR THIS ENTIRE DOCUMENT
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
Character Styles
55 Character style 1 (Image Number) [font], bold cyan: 100%
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WINDOW > STYLES > CHARACTER STYLES
CHARACTER STYLE 2 (PAGE CATEGORY HEADER) ALL CAPS tint: 65%
These options are probably most useful for your resume or CV. Character styles are for small chunks of text within a larger paragraph. The style contains just the info that will differentiate the characters from the paragraph style.
EXAMPLES:
Lauta ipsam vene et rerumet quo te volut magnatas aped quiati berciis aut lit IN EACH, THE FONT FAMILY STAYS THE SAME, odit magnatet hicit, vit ilis ad ma inum et BUT CASE, COLOR AND FACE CHANGE. moluptiam PA QUE PRATUR SENEM atin reprovit doloreium estibus ium faces idi consequam eumquo id quo il minti ut es nos ilit provit lit deribustem.
NOTICE WHAT CHANGES AND WHAT DOESN’T.
Use them for bits of text that will be formatted differently from the text around it. For example, in this document, I’ve used character styles for all the call out numbers: [1] … Just the blue number has a character style applied.
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Tum re officitae. SIMAXIM ILLANI BEARUM facearc ipicillati dit porepra tiores nonsedi tatur? Onessim inctur? Bis unt voluptaquis voluptas estorpo ruptati id que quiatur, teniet eatest offic tem sendi optae estibus ciliquam ra quam fuga. Nullest et pratet aditam lam, ad magnisq uidenihil in pra quiat.
How to Set Them Up They’re basically just like setting up Paragraph Styles! They will contain only info from the CHARACTER palette and not from the PARAGRAPH palette.
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• Set up a few characters or words of text how you want it to look, using the CHARACTER palette [1]
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• Open your CHARACTER STYLES palette [2] • Highlight the text you want the style to be based on • Click the “Create new style” button [4] • Rename it At this point the style has been created, but isn’t applied to the text you used to create it. Re-highlight the text and click the Character Style you want applied (it will be highlighted in the CHARACTER STYLES palette when it is applied).
How to Apply Them • Highlight the text you want changed • Click on the character style (in the palette’s list) that you want applied [3] • Your highlighted text will change to the new style
How to Edit the Character Style • Just double-click on their name in the CHARACTER STYLES palette. [3] • Edit in the new window [5] and press OK
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Nam fugiam accabo. Ut vel mollendae quid quam quiasi blam dolorit minctor uptiae cus peror accusandam, qui utem cus, seque consed mo maio omnimin ctorunto ium esed mosantur, qui sunt optio beaquam alique enducienis molorum et pro quo eum FUGIT LAT ADIT MAGNATUR, cum alitati onsectatur, omnissin cus sum doluptat as etur magnamus, acitati dolupie ndaeperati re, quia
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
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Object Styles WINDOW > STYLES > OBJECT STYLES Object Styles are similar to the other styles in that they save a template for how an object will work. They don’t contain any information about text.
How to Set Them Up • Create a line, box, or other object the way you want it to look
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THICK GRAY OUTLINE COLOR: BLACK, TINT: 20%, STROKE WT: 2PT
BLUE ARROW COLOR: CYAN, TINT: 25%, STROKE WT: 2PT; LINE END: CURVED ARROW
• Open your OBJECT STYLES palette [3] • Select the object you want the style to be based on [5] • Click the “Create new style” button [7] • Rename it
How to Apply Them • Select the object you want changed • Click on the object style (in the palette’s list) that you want applied [5] • Your object will change to the new style
How to Edit the Object Style • Double-click on their name in the OBJECT STYLES palette [5] • Edit in the new window and press OK [1]
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How to Make an Object Style the Default Making one of your Object Styles the default means that when you draw a new object, it’ll automatically be in that style. This setup can save you time from having to change them all afterwards. • Click the palette menu [4]
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• Open the Default Graphic Frame Style submenu • Choose which style you would like to be default [2] Current default is marked with a gray check in the submenu [2], and with a small box in the OBJECT STYLES palette [6].
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
Swatches
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WINDOW > COLOR > SWATCHES Don’t bother using the COLOR palette in InDesign. All you need is the SWATCHES Palette.
ANYTHING WITH THIS COLOR APPLIED WILL NOT PRINT
Swatches are colors that are pre-set for you to use in your document. There are standard ones provided, but you can also create your own. Always use CMYK colors for your portfolio. It will make your print and PDF portfolios consistent. All CMYK values can be converted to RGB, but not all RGB values can accurately be converted to CMYK. More info on Image Rules and PDF Settings pages.
PROCESS COLOR: MEANING THAT IT IS PRINTED AS A PROCESS OF CMYK AND MIXED ON THE PAPER SPOT COLOR WHICH IS MIXED AS A SINGLE INK BEFORE PRINTING
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CMYK (ALWAYS A PROCESS COLOR) RGB (ALWAYS A PROCESS COLOR)
[NOTE: RGB represents the light in your computer’s pixels and the color mixture is based on light’s additive properties. CMYK represents inks that mix to create color and are based on their subtractive properties. Light has the potential to create many more qualities that just aren’t achievable when mixing cyan, yellow, magenta, and black, such as neons and other vibrant colors. If you start with CMYK color values for your portfolio, you’re guaranteed to get the color you expect when printing. If you use RGB color values to print, the printer still convert the color anyway, and you’ll probably be disappointed at how dull it looks compared to what you expected.]
TINT
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You can set up your colors ahead of time to make it easier to keep your document consistent. You can also import Swatch Libraries from Illustrator so that your colors can be consistent across programs without much effort.
How to Add a New Swatch
How to Edit a Swatch
The easiest way is:
• Double-click the new swatch [3] to open the edit window [5]
• Click the New Swatch button [4] at the bottom of the SWATCHES palette [1] • InDesign will duplicate whichever swatch you had selected at the time • Double-click the new swatch to open the edit window [3] • Adjust the settings and click OK You can also: •
Open the palette menu [2]
• Select “New Color Swatch…,” which opens the edit window [3] directly
TINT WILL MAKE IT MORE TRANSPARENT TO THE PAPER IT WILL BE PRINTED ON, BUT NOT TO OTHER OBJECTS IN YOUR DOCUMENT. IF YOU PRINT ON WHITE PAPER, THE COLOR WILL LOOK LIGHTER. IF YOU PRINT ON RED PAPER IT WILL LOOK MORE RED. ETC.
• Adjust the settings and click OK
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
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Swatch Libraries
INDESIGN
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WINDOW > COLOR > SWATCHES
Importing Swatches from Another InDesign Doc Good news! You can import swatches easily from other InDesign documents. If you have another portfolio or set of drawings in a different document with colors you like, you don’t have to manually transfer and create them.
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To import swatches from other InDesign documents: • Open the SWATCHES palette menu [1] • Select “Load Swatches…” [2] • Find the document with the swatches you want to import and click “Open”. [3] NOTE: You will only be able to import from InDesign .indd files and Swatch Library .ase files (not Illustrator .ai files).
Creating Swatch Libraries in Illustrator These instructions are for working within Illustrator. • To use swatches you already have, open an existing Illustrator file; otherwise, create a new document • Open the SWATCHES palette [4]
ILLUSTRATOR
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• If you don’t already have the swatches you want to use in your library, create them • Open the palette menu [5] • Select “Save Swatch Library as ASE…” [6] NOTE: If you save it as an AI, you will not be able to import it to InDesign • Name and save your file [7]
Importing from Illustrator To import swatch libraries from Illustrator, it’s the same process as importing swatches from InDesign documents: • Open the SWATCHES palette menu [1] • Select “Load Swatches…” [2] • Find the document with the swatches you want to import and click “Open”. You will only be able to import from InDesign .indd files and Swatch Library .ase files (not Illustrator .ai files).
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
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Align Palette WINDOW > OBJECT & LAYOUT > ALIGN The ALIGN palette is your friend, and he wants to help you. The buttons on the top half are pretty self-explanatory. The “Distribute Spacing” at the bottom is often overlooked, but is invaluable in your portfolio. Instead of eyeballing the spacing between objects when you place them, use the Distribute Spacing buttons to ensure that all of your spacings throughout your portfolio are the same. It will give your portfolio a sense of polish and precision, which is impressive to HR managers. It seems like a small thing, but will actually make a huge difference in making your portfolio look professional.
Distribute Spacing If you don’t see the “Distribute Spacing” menu at the bottom of the ALIGN palette: • Press the arrows [1] next to ALIGN to cycle through palette expansion options • Designate the spacing you want, and use the buttons to space your selected objects [2]
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EYEBALLED
ALIGNED & DISTRIBUTED SPACING
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SETTING UP YOUR FILE
Photoshopping Models
65 PHOTOSHOP
1- BASELINE
2- 25 ADJUSTMENT
3- FINISH
CURVES
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Curves vs. Levels You’ve probably been using Levels for a long time and think they do the trick. Levels do an okay job, but Curves do better. Levels and Curves are basically the same thing, except Curves give you more control. Instead of only being able to adjust along one axis with Levels, Curves allow you to adjust along two axes. To the right, first I show the baseline: what the adjustment layers look like when you open them up, without any manipulation of your image. You can see the histogram in the background show the same information. The second column shows both black and white inputs moved in an increment of 25. When applied separately, they both produce the same effect on the model photo.
LEVELS
The third column shows more refined control in the Curves layer, resulting in a better image seen below. The contrast has been bumped up a lot from the original, and the shadows are lightened to a better value from the straight curve produced by the Levels and Curves in the second column.
HISTOGRAM
Both Curves and Levels allow you to adjust along color channels as well—adjusting just the blue or cyan, etc.
To Adjust your Curves PHOTOSHOP > WINDOW > ADJUSTMENTS
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• Click on the Curves icon [1] • Either move the handles at the bottom [3]
MODEL PHOTO
• Or click on the line and drag to create new anchor points [2] • To delete an anchor point, click and drag them out of the box
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ORIGINAL
FINAL
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PREPARING TO PRINT
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Spell Check EDIT > SPELLING > CHECK SPELLING
Yes it Exists! Use it!
Options It works a lot like spell check in Microsoft Word. You can change or ignore multiple instances at once. InDesign also gives you the option to spell check only within a set of linked text boxes (i.e. Story) or throughout the entire document.
CHECKS ENTIRE DOCUMENT CHECKS ONLY WITHIN SELECTED TEXT BOX, INCLUDING ANY THAT ARE LINKED
CHANGE A SINGLE INSTANCE OF A TYPO
CHANGE ALL INSTANCES OF A TYPO
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PREPARING TO PRINT
First, Packaging
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FILE > PACKAGE… Packaging is a life saver! InDesign collects and copies all of your images (and fonts) and puts them in a single folder with a copy of your .indd document. You can then edit and resize the images without damaging the originals, thus preserving them for future use and resizing.
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Packaging Your Files Once you have your portfolio laid out, but before you edit the images for print, you want to package it. The copied images are in a Links folder, allowing you to re-size and change the images for printing your portfolio without harming the original images files— which you will be very grateful for later when you redesign your portfolio and inevitably enlarge some of those images. InDesign copies the fonts so you can transfer the entire package to another computer and install the fonts on the new machine if they don’t have them.
How to Package Your Portfolio • File > Package… • InDesign scans your file for its compatibility with printing. A dialog window will pop up [1] with a summary of its findings. It will helpfully tell you if any of your fonts are missing [2], or how many images are in RGB [3]. When you package for the first time, that number will tell you how many you will need to change to CMYK before you print. Sometimes I start to package just to get this dialog warning and double-check to see if I missed any images when converting them all to CMYK • InDesign will prompt you to save your file [4] • Continue past the Instructions window [5], you don’t need it • Locate where you want to save your new packaged folder and click Save [6] • Close the file you’re working in and open the new packaged file to keep working The beauty of the package is that everything is copied and nothing is moved. This approach is a great way to save back-up versions of your portfolio as you go.
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PREPARING TO PRINT
Image File Rules
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The best way to prepare your portfolio is to prepare it for print, and then convert to PDF afterwards. This is because the technical needs for the print versions are more strict than the PDF needs, and starting with the print version will insure that both print and PDF portfolios are consistent to each other and look good. (Refer to the Swatches page where I explain the differences between RGB and CMYK colors and why you should design in CMYK.) Convert all your images according to the “For print” rules listed below.
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You can check most of the info you need on each image within the LINKS palette [1].
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For Print • Flatten all of your PSDs and TIFFs [2]
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• Vector and raster are both ok • All images CMYK [3] • 150-300dpi [4] The standard is 300 dpi, but optically, your eyes won’t notice a difference down to 150 dpi. Any lower than that will be noticeable. • Placed at 100% [5] Anywhere between 80-120% is acceptable. If the image is placed at 100%, the Scale won’t show up on the Link Info list
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ANOTHER, SOMETIMES FASTER, WAY TO CHECK WHAT SCALE AN IMAGE IS PLACED AT IS: • USE THE DIRECT SELECT TOOL TO SELECT THE IMAGE (THE BOUNDING BOX WILL TURN RED) • THE SCALE BOX ABOVE [6] WILL SHOW ITS EFFECTIVE SCALE. THESE SHOULD BE EQUAL AND SHOULD BE BETWEEN 80-120% (BUT 100% IS BEST)
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PREPARING TO PRINT
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PDF Settings for Printing FILE > ADOBE PDF SETTINGS > [PDF/X-1A:2001] The PDF settings for printing will be different than for email because you want a higher resolution and therefore will have a larger file size than what you can send through email.
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This default setting is included with InDesign and was designed for publishers to PDF their documents for printing.
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You shouldn’t have to change too many settings. The PDF can be as large as needed for high quality printing. You are only limited by the size of your thumbdrive.
PDF Requirements • Size doesn’t matter • PDF as single pages, not spreads • Include bleed and crop marks • PDF as CMYK
PDF Settings • GENERAL: No Spreads [1] • COMPRESSION: Use Bicubic Downsampling [2] Downsample to no less than 300dpi [3] Image Quality at Maximum [4] • MARKS & BLEEDS: Check Crop Marks [5] Check Use Document Bleed Settings [6]
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• OUTPUT: Have it convert to CMYK [7]
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PREPARING TO PRINT
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PDF Settings for Email FILE > ADOBE PDF SETTINGS > SMALLEST FILE SIZE These settings will make your PDF as small as possible.
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I will show you how to tweak the settings to get a better quality PDF, but you will have to experiment for the best compromise between quality and file size.
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PDF Requirements for Email
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• Your PDF must be under 10mb. • PDF as spreads • PDF as RGB color (I usually convert my images so they print best, and then have the PDF settings convert back to RGB for the PDF. The reason for this conversion is that all CMYK values are convertible to RGB, but not all RGB values are convertible to CMYK. Refer to the explanation on the Swatches page.) • Compress images to 96-300dpi You will have to adjust this to get your PDF smaller than 10mb. 300dpi is full size, but you can go down to 96dpi, which is the resolution of most computer screens. • Vector and raster are both ok You may decide to rasterize all the vector files. Sometimes they look better rasterized, and sometimes they help with file size. You’ll have to experiment to see what works best for you. • No bleed, slug, or crop marks included.
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PDF Settings • GENERAL: Check Spreads [1] • COMPRESSION: Use Bicubic Downsampling [2] Downsample recommended at 150dpi, but minimum is 96dpi (resolution of most screens) [3] Image Quality at Medium if possible, may need to be Low [4] • MARKS & BLEEDS: No Crop Marks [5] No Document Bleed Settings [6] • OUTPUT: Have it convert to RGB [7]
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Be Yourself Don’t aim to make a really beautiful generic portfolio. Aim to make a portfolio that looks like you. Above everything else, make sure that you love your portfolio because the people who also love it will give you a job—and that’s the job you want.
—Sunny Schneberger (M. Arch. 2015)