Symbol Methodology Blog Entry

When thinking of an umbrella topic to base my symbol project around, immediately I thought of designing a symbol that encompassed what made me who I am today. As cliche as that sounds, it was easy to find words that fell in to the category and they were all things I was passionate about.

My first three words were all tangible and easily traceable: Happiness (cat), Balance (shoes), and Home (Texas). I wanted these three basic symbols to be the foundations of the more stylized alterations: Harmony (scale), Travel (paper airplanes), Serenity (mountains). I knew I could incorporate these stylized symbols into the traced ones, and still add my abstract designs: Movement, Geometry, and Growth. Once I had my words picked out, the design process began!

I traced my three basic symbols (shown below).

Cat2.jpegShoe1f Shoe2fHome1Home2-

Once I had those traced in illustrator, I used hand drawing and illustrator pen tool to design my stylized symbols (shown below).

Paper Airplane Stylized

Finally, I used a combination of both illustrator and my own drawing to complete my abstracts (shown below)

Abstrace

I eventually blended a few of the words together to create different symbols (shown below).

GdesLogos-#3 (1)

From these, I picked my final 3 symbols (shown below).

StarFinal CatFinal TexasFinal

It was a really interesting and exciting process to actually blend the symbols together. Having other classmates and Tuan critique my work either by editing the actual illustrator file themselves or just offering verbal advice, I was able to expand my depth of creativity. I enjoyed this phase the most because I realized how all the work I had put in prior to this phase was necessary. Had I started at the combining phase before having any idea what my foundation symbols looked like, my finished product would not have been looked so polished.

Although I am happy with the finished product, I think personally I could have done better at each individual stage. The qualities of a good symbol entail the design principles balance/harmony, scalability, and simplicity. I think my symbols fall under these categories, but they could be massaged even further. I spent a lot of time thinking of ways to modify and evolve each symbol from a basic stage to be more custom, including perusing through Pinterest boards and gaining inspiration from other students’ work in the classroom.

If a rubric were used to classify my symbols as “good” or “bad” in reference to the categories mentioned earlier, I think my symbols would be considered “good” simply because they are within the boundaries of the categories; however, there could be more thoughtfulness to them. I personally find myself to be my hardest critique when looking at my work, so by taking a step back and comparing my work to that of the class, I am able to appreciate it more.

If a rubric was designed based solely on the categories that make a symbol a good symbol, my designs would surpass basic quality levels. Although they could be more creative, they are clean, crisp, and put together. I spent quality time on every developmental level for this project and attended every class period for critiques and work days. I think that in comparison to the class, my symbols passed as an “A”. However, this does not mean I am arrogant or jaded about my place in the class. I worked hard to create these symbols, but they are not perfect. They could have been better, but I am happy with how they turned out.

 

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