Hitchings | D054 | Fall 2022

Category: Assignment Instructions (Page 2 of 4)

Project 2 & 3

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For Project 2 and Project 3 you can chose to work withing the same subject matter as Project 1, in which case each should be designed to accompany each other. Or you could choose to work on an entirely new topic.

Purpose

Visualizing information with design can play an important role in facilitating comprehension and awareness to an audience. To explore various methodologies for displaying information and to develop strategies for designing effectively and communicating to audiences. To imagine new forms of organizing information and to discover how information can be clarified to create more coherent communication.

Project 2 Visual Diagram

Visual Diagram: is a simplified drawing that shows the appearance, structure, or workings of something; a schematic representation.

Objective

Select an object or an item that could use explanation (i.e. the human heart, a butterfly, a hiking boot, etc.) Using design, create a visual diagram that details:

  1. What an object is made up of and how it is structured
  2. How it behaves/functions
  3. And any additional information that might be relevant to a deeper understanding of it

Project 3 Information Flowchart

Information Flowchart: should focus on information sequencing; explaining a concept through a series of steps: A. B. C., 1. 2. 3., etc. The steps do not have to be presented sequentially but they need to be read/ understood within the context of each other.


Objective

The flowchart must present 5 facts (i.e. metamorphosis of a butterfly, a hiking trail, Battle of Gettysburg, Pearl Harbor, Hiroshima, Evolution of the Internet etc.) either:

  1. Historical
  2. Geographic
  3. Time based

Project Details

Stages

  • Phase 1: Research: understanding topic.
    Gathering, organizing and assessing data and content
  • Phase 2: Sketches and concept development
    Figuring what information, you have and how to best represent (charts and graphs)
  • Phase 3: Design and production (Illustrator & InDesign)
  • Phase 4: Revisions and final edits

Specifications

  • Tabloid Poster – 11×17 inches (Vertical or Horizontal layout )
  • Margin: 0.5”
  • Bleed: 0.25”
  • Set up a grid
  • Gutter: .025”

Timeline

  • Week 9-10 Phase 1: Research 
  • Week 10-12 Phase 2: Sketches and concept development       
  • Week 12-13 Phase 3: Design, production and revisions            
  • Week 14-15 Phase 4: Revisions and final edits DUE week15                

Assignment 4 Design and Development

Getting Started

Phase 3 Information Graphic: Design Development Before moving into this stage, make sure you have completed:

  1. Refined your thesis statement
  2. Collected, organized and written your content
  3. Found some excellent examples of professional work that can serve as inspiration and reference
  4. Developed a few sketches and settled on the one that gives you a clear plan forward and supports your thesis statement
  5. Experimented with a grid structure
  6. Started to develop the visual assets (graph, charts, images and photos) that you will need to visualize the piece.
  7. Settled on a typeface that is functional and in style with your peice

Mission

Visually tell a story through researched and fact based information using graphic based charts and graphs. The design in the form of a poster must present a ‘problem’ and then explain or explore the ‘problem’ through quantitative or qualitative information that has been researched and is displayed in a way that clarifies and compares.

Continue go back to your thesis statement, all components or your design solution should support your thesis statement, keep revising.

Document Specs

Set up the document in InDesign. Chunk your outline into sections and lay them out within your decided gird.

  • Tabloid Poster – 11×17 inches (Vertical layout)
  • Margin: 0.5”
  • Bleed: 0.25”
  • Set up a grid
  • Gutter: .025”

Optional: You can choose to work larger – 20″ x 30″

DUE – First Draft

Week 7 Monday 10/24/22

Assignment 3 Presentations

Presenting Graphs/Charts

There are a number of well-established models that are important to understand when visualizing information. These models have evolved over time and are meant to help organize and structure quantitative information through graphic representation in ways that make concepts easier to understand.

See the list of different charts and graphs below, also featured on the >>Data Visualization Catalogue project developed by Severino Ribecca.

Please sign up for one and prepare a five-ten minute presentation to share with the class. Presentations should include:

  1. A detailed description of what the chart/graph shows best and what kind of data it represents. You can use the Data Visualization Catalogue to find this information.
  2. Carefully browse through the links listed on the class course site: >>Activities/Lessons/Inspiration and find at least two examples of the chart you are in presenting in a professional layout. Be sure to include the credits for the design work you show and be prepared to explain what the design you are showing is about.   
  3. How you decide to make your presentation is up to you. You can create a PowerPoint presentation, you can walk us through websites, you can collect a series of images in a folder and present the work from the folder. Whichever way you decide to show, your presentation should be organized and demonstrate thorough research on your part. You should be able to talk about the pieces you show.

Sign up for one of the following:

You can save your presentation into this dropbox folder (make sure you create a folder with your name on it): >>Assignment3-Chart/GraphPresentations

COMPARISONS

Showing differences or similarities between values.

Due Week 6

  • Bar Chart: Calvin Garcia                             
  • Pie Chart: Iqra Bhatti                           
  • Stacked Bar Chart: Destiny Thomas               
  • Bubble Chart: Wilna Michel                    
  • Bubble Cloud:  Bryan Rodriguez                      
  • Radial Column Graph:  Sadman Hafiz      

TRANSFORMATIONS

Showing transformations over time or via Location

Due Week 7

  • Line Chart: Joseph Asimeng                             
  • Area Char:  Elvis Gordillo                             
  • Dot Maps:     
  • Map:  Faye Wang                     
  • Timeline: Kyle Nam                              
  • Histogram: Mercedes Alvarez                                
  • Gantt Chart                            
  • Choropleth Map: Freddy Romero

ORGANIZATION

Arranging content by groupings, rankings, or process

Due Week 8

  • Timetable:                   
  • Flow Chart:  Maria Iacono                
  • Mind Map:              
  • Venn Diagram              
  • Heatmap                  
  • Tree Diagram: Cindy Ovando            
  • Calendar: Angela Iacono                    
  • Population Pyramid      

Please let me know in class which you would like to present and I will add your name to the Chart/Graph.

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