Add transcription for: Orientation Exercise Tasty Tidbits.wav
Browse files
transcriptions/Orientation Exercise Tasty Tidbits_transcription.json
ADDED
|
@@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 1 |
+
{
|
| 2 |
+
"text": " Welcome to your first exercise. In exciting news, your client brief will be the same as mine. You are one of the other illustrators that the food blog TastyTidbits has reached out to. They're looking for you to create a 5-image Instagram carousel featuring your favorite recipe as well. Don't limit yourself to breakfast foods or something sweet like I did. You could illustrate a sandwich or even some sushi. And don't be afraid to make it simple. Simple can be beautiful and will also allow for you to have more time to play around with texture and technique as you're working. Pick something that you're actually excited about and go for it. For now, I'd like you to use this brief to get warmed up and play around in Photoshop. Just get comfortable. You can browse Pinterest, artist websites, different inspiration books to come up with a little mood board to help you get your ideas flowing. Think of shapes and color while picking your recipe and think about creative ways that you can play with the composition. Challenge yourself by adding masks and textures and playing with your new fill action. I'm sure there will come out of this exercise and even this whole orientation lesson with quite a few questions. But I'm thinking that most of them will be answered in the following weeks as we go over most of this content in a lot more detail. Let me just take the pressure off by saying this is pretty much just a warm-up to prepare yourself for the rest of this course. By the time you're on the last lesson, you'll be able to look back at what you've done here and see how much you've grown. So just have fun with these frames and don't overdo it. Make sure to take some time to rest and mentally prepare yourself for your first lesson on Monday. You'll have this whole week to work on this and I wouldn't want you to burn out on this first little exercise. And just to recap, you'll be working on five different digital illustrations for Instagram for an Instagram carousel. I would suggest working in 300 dpi just to make sure everything's high res enough. I would also suggest working in RGB color space because this is what's best for digital and will mainly be seeing these illustrations on digital. You won't be printing them. I know that the client didn't actually say what pixels size they wanted, so I just went ahead and worked in a standard Instagram size that I use a lot of the time, which is 1500 by 1500 pixels, and I think that's a good place for you to start as well. The tasty 10 bits brief will be available for you to download, so you can get a closer look at what they're saying and some of the image references they provided. Once your artwork is done, save each image as a JPEG, zip it up and upload it to the homework locker so your TA can critique it. That's all for this exercise, so go have fun, draw, get excited for this course, and good luck!",
|
| 3 |
+
"segments": [
|
| 4 |
+
{
|
| 5 |
+
"text": " Welcome to your first exercise. In exciting news, your client brief will be the same as mine. You are one of the other illustrators that the food blog TastyTidbits has reached out to. They're looking for you to create a 5-image Instagram carousel featuring your favorite recipe as well. Don't limit yourself to breakfast foods or something sweet like I did. You could illustrate a sandwich or even some sushi. And don't be afraid to make it simple. Simple can be beautiful and will also allow for you to have more time to play around with texture and technique as you're working. Pick something that you're actually excited about and go for it. For now, I'd like you to use this brief to get warmed up and play around in Photoshop. Just get comfortable. You can browse Pinterest, artist websites, different inspiration books to come up with a little mood board to help you get your ideas flowing. Think of shapes and color while picking your recipe and think about creative ways that you can play with the composition. Challenge yourself by adding masks and textures and playing with your new fill action. I'm sure there will come out of this exercise and even this whole orientation lesson with quite a few questions. But I'm thinking that most of them will be answered in the following weeks as we go over most of this content in a lot more detail. Let me just take the pressure off by saying this is pretty much just a warm-up to prepare yourself for the rest of this course. By the time you're on the last lesson, you'll be able to look back at what you've done here and see how much you've grown. So just have fun with these frames and don't overdo it. Make sure to take some time to rest and mentally prepare yourself for your first lesson on Monday. You'll have this whole week to work on this and I wouldn't want you to burn out on this first little exercise. And just to recap, you'll be working on five different digital illustrations for Instagram for an Instagram carousel. I would suggest working in 300 dpi just to make sure everything's high res enough. I would also suggest working in RGB color space because this is what's best for digital and will mainly be seeing these illustrations on digital. You won't be printing them. I know that the client didn't actually say what pixels size they wanted, so I just went ahead and worked in a standard Instagram size that I use a lot of the time, which is 1500 by 1500 pixels, and I think that's a good place for you to start as well. The tasty 10 bits brief will be available for you to download, so you can get a closer look at what they're saying and some of the image references they provided. Once your artwork is done, save each image as a JPEG, zip it up and upload it to the homework locker so your TA can critique it. That's all for this exercise, so go have fun, draw, get excited for this course, and good luck!"
|
| 6 |
+
}
|
| 7 |
+
]
|
| 8 |
+
}
|