It's been a very busy last two weeks for our first year students as they completed the visual and technical 'assault course' that we call Old School...
Manual skills still underpin much of any working Graphic Designer or Illustrator's life. Think of all that packaging that needs to be mocked-up or presentation boards that need to be professionally assembled.
Great Illustration is not only underpinned by an ability to draw well but also by great technical skills. The reality here is there are no 'quick fixes'. It takes years to become a really good painter, or pen & ink artist, or printmaker or...
'Old School' is our opportunity to allow the students to find out how good, bad or ugly their making/drawing/gluing/painting skills actually are right at the start of their course. It helps them identify what they're good at and much more importantly focusses their attention and concentration on working hard to develop those areas that they're not so good at.
Some students are a little camera shy...
This is what stretched paper looks like
The construction of a 3D letter 'R' is revealed
How many students does it take to use a guillotine?
Happily, we can report that the overall standard was very good. For a generation who hasn't done any technical drawing or that much painting, we were particularly impressed with their ability to handle constructed letters, draw straight lines, wield a compass accurately, understand the complexities of oblique, isometric and orthographic projection and produce impressive copies of great illustrator's work.
Here's a small selection of what they did...
Window mount a postcard.
Use the correct tool (knife) and this can be achieved beautifully (left). Use the wrong tool (hamster) and the results can be a little disappointing (right).
Cut a perfect freehand circle
Stab stitched book with elaborate, hand-cut graduated square hole motif. Tidy!
JJS celebrates achieving perfection in the task to flat mount six postcards by adopting the classic double 'thumbs up' gesture and shouting "losers" at his fellow students
Construct a classic, Roman 'M' by following a devilishly complicated set of instructions
Cut-out letters carefully spaced
Colour wheels and tonal scales
Create a perfect cube from thin card - at the bottom we see what perfection looks like
Embossing geometric shapes, two excellent, one not so excellent
Graphic Design students were given freehand pen and brush tasks. Pictured at the bottom is the hand of destiny brandishing the Parker pen of doom
Constructed 3D 'R's and two more bashful students
Draw a 52mm square in the middle of an A4 sheet of pristine layout paper. The overlay shows where it should have been...
Oblique, Isometric and Third-angle Orthographic projections of the 3D 'R'
Graphic Design students had to recreate a poster by the German designer Emil Pirchan
Illustration students copying a dip-pen drawing by the great illustrator Mervyn Peake
Illustration students used scraper board to recreate a wood engraving by Clare Leighton
Here are the illustrators having a go at doing a 'Brad Holland' using acrylics
N.B. Once the tasks had been completed the students were advised to have a lie down...
Your project was really nice. Thanks for sharing with us.
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