Thursday, 19 June 2014

The Fray t-shirts currently

Here are some examples of current t-shirt designs for
The Fray











 




I think that it would be good to create a design for The Fray as I feel that there aren't many eye catching or inspirational designs for them displayed on t-shirts. I like the first one that I have shown so may use this for inspiration. 

Beatles t-shirts currently

Here are some examples of 
The Beatles t-shirts 
that are currently out there on the market











By collecting current examples it will help me to generate ideas when designing my own designs and take inspiration from them.

T-Shirt Printing Techniques

Screen Printing 

This is the most common method that T-Shirt printers use found on the high street. This is because the production cost for high volumes of screen printed T-shirts is very low. 

Designs are printed on to the t-shirt with plasticol inks and sealed by a process called heat tunnel curing. Each colour needs to be printed on to the t-shirt individually meaning it can cost around £25 to set up each screen.
Consequently set up costs are high and full colour printing is nearly impossible. Therefore a large number of t-shirts is the best option for using the screen printing method. 

Transfer Printing 

The cheap, high quality and professionally produced transfers are generally printed on a laser printer and applied to a t-shirt using a high quality heat press. The quality produced would not normally be up to the standards expected by retail customers who are used to the finish and feel of screen printing but is commonly used for Hen Nights, Stag Do's and promotional events etc.

Vinyl Transfers 

Vinyl transfers produce possibly the most durable custom t-shirts of all the 4 main printing procecesses. Vinyl transfers are often used for the production of custom work wear. A digitally controlled cutter is used to cut a design from a vinyl sheet and the vinyl is then removed from its backing sheet and applied to the garment using a heat press. 

Vinyl is produced in a wide range of colours and is is great for simple solid colour designs. Placement is done by hand so is not really well suited to fiddly designs with multiple colours etc. 

Direct to Garment (DTG)

Direct to garment printing is the most recent printing method. T-shirts are loaded on to a plate in a similar manner to screen printing. Textile inks are printed on to the t-shirt using an inkject printer. 

When printing onto white t-shirts this method is consistent, fairly rapid and inexpensive as the designs have no physical set up costs like screen printing does. However dark t-shirts cause more problems as they need a white underbase for the design to be printed on to. This can result in the t-shirt not washing as well because the design can become rigid and ruined. 






Wednesday, 18 June 2014

Most iconic T-shirts




Here are a selection of the 
'Most Iconic T-shirts of All Time' 
that I found on the internet.


I love New York T-shirt 
Known to be the most Iconic T-shirt with a design created by Milton Glaser who originally sketched it on to a napkin and is now seen on many T-shirts and many other products. 




Rolling Stones T-shirt 
The famous "Lick" design for one of the best Rolling Stones albums Sticky Fingers became one of Rock 'n' roll's most recognizable symbols. 




Superman T-shirt 




Batman T-shirt 


Both Batman and Superman are iconic marvel superheros so their logos are seen often on T-shirts due to their popularity. 


Hard Rock Cafe T-shirt 
With having over 100 cafe's over the world, these shirts have been very collectible over the years


Vote for Pedro T-shirt 
After the movie Napoleon Dynamite in 2004, this shirt has since gained hugely popular. 
Even thought the design isn't particularly eye catching, the movie created quite an imprint during Napoleon's famous dance scene.   




Pink Floyd T-shirt
Iconic design for one of rocks most emblematic albums and seen often on T-shirts as Pink Floyd inspires generations of listeners. 



Run DMC T-shirt 
DMC are considered to be one of the most influential rap groups in history and they were the first rap group nominated for a Grammy.




Tuxedo T-Shirt 
Popular for the 'perfect' mix of high and low, a good shirt for any occasion. 

Che Guevara T-shirt
Che Guevara was an iconic Marxism figure
The image still remains relatively unchanged, though the drawing has seen many iterations. 



Tie dye T-shirt
Originally aimed at the free spirited youth which caught on, most often seen in summer launches.



Ghostbusters T-shirt
After 2 movies, animated TV series and video games, Ghostbusters still remains popular to this day. 



Hypercolor T-shirt 
Designed in the 80's and sold over $50 million of shirts in a 4 month period 



Jack Daniels T-Shirt 
Historic Tennessee Whiskey that't not only very popular to drink, it's a popular T-shirt design too.




Bob Marley T-Shirt 
National Musical and fashion icon, selling 25 million copies world wide.

Thursday, 3 April 2014

Photograms

What is a Photogram? 

A Photogram is a photographic image that is created without using a camera by placing objects directly on to light sensitive material such as photographic paper and exposing it to light. 

The result of the photogram depends on the materials of the objects used as for example, objects that are made of metal or plastic will appear white because they are not transparent so they will not be exposed to light.Objects that are semi transparent such as glass will appear grey and fully transparent objects such as light sensitive photographic paper will appear black as they will be completely exposed to light.







Some of the first photographic images made were photograms.
William Henry Fox Talbot paced leaves and pieces of material on to sensitized paper and left them outside on a sunny day to expose. The result of this was a dark background with a white silhouette of the object used. Man Ray was an photographer who used photograms and referred to them as Rayograms.

  
                                        

Wednesday, 26 March 2014

ITV logo commissioning


  ITV is the UK's leading commercial terrestrial broadcaster and has the UK's leading portfolio of digital channels - ITV2, ITV3, ITV4 and CITV. Annually they invest around £1 Billion in content for its broadcast channels and ITV.com. 


ITV - biggest entertainment events, to original drams, major sport, landmark factual series and independent news. 

ITV2 - biggest digital channel in the UK and targets people aged 16 - mid 30's with a range of entertaining programming. 

ITV3 - home of quality drama and has grown to be second biggest digital channel in the UK. 

ITV4 - sport based  - targeted at men

CITV - free-to-air childrens channel

Commissioning areas

  • Entertainment and comedy - e,g. Ant & Decs Saturday Night Takeaway, Benidorm, Splash, Take me Out, The X Factor.
  Benidorm

  • Factual - e.g. Countrywise, Great Welsh Adventure - Griff Rhys Jones.
Countrywise

  • Daytime - e.g. This Morning, The Chase, Tipping Point, The Paul O'Grady show, Sunday Side Up.
This Morning

  • Drama - e.g. Mr Selfridge, Doc Martin, Broadchurch, Downtown Abbey, Scott & Bailey 
Broadchurch

  • Sport - e.g. Rugby, Football, French Open, Tour de France
Football 

  • Current Affairs - e.g. The Agenda, The World's Deadliest Wallpaper
The Agenda 

  • Digital channels - e.g. Celebrity Juice, The Only Way is Essex (Programmes shown on ITV2, ITV3, ITV4 and CITV.)
Keith Lemon, Celebrity Juice

  • Online - ITV Player - allows audiences to catch up on most programmes/episodes that they have missed or to watch again.
Online - The X Factor App
 








Sunday, 23 March 2014

Alan Fletcher


 Alan Fletcher is considered to be one of the most influential figures in post - war British graphic design. He was a founding partner in Pentagram in the 1970s , where he helped to establish a model of combining commercial partnership with creative independence. Fletcher also developed some of the most memorable graphic schemes of the era such as the Victoria and Albert Museum logo, the Reuters logo and the Institute of Directors logo. As creative director of Phaidon, he also made his mark on book design.

I have noticed that his logo designs are all monochromatic where as for example his poster designs contain very bright, eye catching colours. This could suggest that he thought working this way proved more effective and that colour should be used for the advertisement, not the advertiser. More often than not he used sans serif fonts in his work, where as in the V&A logo and IoD logo he has used serif fonts.