Monday, April 4, 2011

Computer Imaging Projects - Project 3 - CD Cover - front & back

CD Cover Front


Back Cover


For this project, I was to design a professional looking CD Cover, front and back.  For a while I was mulling over what I could do, but I knew I wanted to do a personalized compilation album of some kind.  Well, it didn't hit me until this project was almost due, but I had a chance to cross over some of what I've learned in my other class.  I am concurrently taking a jazz music history class which I happen to be enjoying very much.  After studying for my second test in that class, which includes a song and artist identification listening portion, I constantly had many jazz songs stuck in my head.  Then I realized since it was already on my mind, I might as well make a jazz themed CD. 

I initially had thoughts to do a throwback type of album cover from the 40's or 50's which would have been really neat, or even a cover design that included pictures of performers.  Since all I had in my head was the music, most of it without lyrics, I figured I could go with a strictly music based theme meaning including symbols and instruments, but no people.  Also, by doing this, I consciously made the decision to keep the colors strickly black and white which resembles much of jazz in many ways.  I went with black as the background color in order to give it the sense of a shiny or glossy piano black.  I did not draw or create any of the original images as I wish I was good enough to do so.  However, I was able to invert the colors and arrange the images in a way that I thought fit well together.  I intentionally picked the instruments that typically make up a jazz quintet - trumpet, saxaphone, bass, piano - but I could not figure out how to include the drumset so I left it out.

I picked the title based on the songs I was including on the album, and since all of them are essential listening to understanding the progress and history of jazz over the decades, I figured I might as well treat them as lessons.  The font I picked is called "Monotype Corsiva".  To me it fit best and really matches the way the music notes and symbols look.  Particularly, you can really see a resemblance in the way that the round bulb like features at the end of the "L", "J", and "z" characters match the bulb-like features in the bottom of the treble clef staff symbol and the black "s" curves on the bass instrument.  The underline is actually a thin strait brush stroke because that particular font does not have an italic or bold form, only regular, so I had to draw it in.  In the bottom left corner I ripped off the Sony BMG logo in order to make it look a little more official.

On the back cover, which I admit is a bit more plain than I wanted it, I continued the theme over from the front cover by placing a bending music staff at the top left edge.  I placed the title again in the top right.  I used the default "Myriad Pro" font to list the music tracks because I thought it looked pretty good.  I bolded the Song title and track time while leaving the artist regular.  I should have made the artist names about 1 or 2 points smaller than the track title and time though.  I used the same font, albeit much smaller, for the copyright info at the bottom left.  I wasn't sure exactly what to put so I typed in exactly what was on my Sony published jazz textbook CD set.  I again included the Sony BMG logo to the right and took a generic barcode image and placed it in the bottom right corner where they usually go.  I tried my best to have everything lined up properly to give it a subtle cleanliness to it.

Anyways, I probably typed way too much describing this, but I figured while it was fresh on my mind, I might as well, if nothing else as a reminder to myself.  To finish this post, I will include all of the original image components below so you can see what I chose to work with and compare it with the final composite image. 








Computer Imaging Projects - Project 2 - Collage

Collage


I made this collage using pictures from my trip to E3 2001 in L.A. It required that I use masks such as layer masks. I tried to arrange everything so that there was implied motion going in all directions. Left, right, back, fowards, down and up.  Here are the original images that I used.










Sunday, April 3, 2011

Computer Imaging Projects - Project 1 - Art Portrait

Art Portrait

I used the "Cutout" filter for myself, and "Torn Edges" filter for the background.

Original Image is of me facing the Los Angeles Convention Center (behind the camera) during the Electronics Entertainment Expo of 2001.  (The date stamp is wrong.)