Kaylyn Crane ’ s Digital Process Book
Mar 17, 2016
Kaylyn Crane’sDigital Process Book
2
Read, Reflect and Report Section 66
Ch 6 67Ch 10 68
Mini Project Section 56
Single Letter & Infographic 57
Mini Project 1 - Love Letter
Intake 52Final Business Card & Letterhead 62Printing Spec Sheets 63
Mini Project 2 - Business Card
Sketches to Final Design 64
Mini Project 3 - Olive OilProject 2 - Stephens Life
a. Intake 14b. Creative Development Worksheet 15c. Research 19 d. Computer Play/Ideas 22e. Final Execution 28
a. Intake 33b. Creative Development Worksheet 34c. Research 40d. Enlarged Ideas 48e. Computer Play/Ideas 49f. Final Execution 52
Project 3 - Design Your Own Magazine
a. Intake 4b. Creative Development Worksheet 5c. Research 7d. Computer Play/Ideas 9e. Final Execution 12
Project 1 - Inside Columbia
Project Section 3
Contents
Publication DesignTaking large amounts of information & designing it in a way that makes it quick
& easy for the viewer to read.
3
Project Section
4 4
Project 1 - Inside Columbia: Intake
Intake
4
5
Project 1 - Inside Columbia: C
reative Dev. Worksheet
Brainstorming
6 6
BrainstormingProject 1 - Inside C
olumbia: Creative D
ev. Worksheet
7
Project 1 - Inside Columbia: Research
Inside Columbia Magazine
8 8
Project 1 - Inside Columbia: Research
Kaylyn Crane 8
Possible Color Choices
9
Project 1 - Inside Columbia: C
omputer Play
Possible Font Choices (Pull Quote)
Nelson plummeted under water once more and realized his No. 2 rule was now broken: Never get separated from your boat.
Nelson plummeted under water once more and realized his No. 2 rule was now broken: Never get separated from your boat.
Nelson plummeted under water once more and realized his No. 2 rule was now broken: Never get separated from your boat.
Nelson plummeted under water once more and realized his No. 2 rule was now broken: Never get separated from your boat.
Nelson plummeted under water once more and realized his No. . rule was now broken. Never get separated from your boat.
Nelson plummeted under water once more and realized his No. 2 rule was now broken: Never get separated from your boat.
10 10
Project 1 - Inside Columbia: C
omputer Play
Kaylyn Crane 10
WildLost inthe
A Story of Survival in the Last Frontier
WildLostinthe
A Story of Survival in the Last Frontier
WildLost in
the
WildWild
Lost WILDinthe
LostWild
Possible Font Choices (Header)
WildLost in the A Story of Survival in theLast Frontier By Whitney Dreier
Phtotos By L.G. Patterson
By Whitney DreierPhtotos By L.G. PattersonA Story of Survival in the Last Frontier
WildLost in the
Lost WildintheA Story of Survival in the Last Frontier By Whitney Dreier
Phtotos By L.G. Patterson
WildLostA Story of Survival in the Last Frontier
11
Project 1 - Inside Columbia: C
omputer Play Stuart Nelson Jr. paddled his kayak expertly down the Little Wind River. The late August weather was warm and sunny, despite Nelson’s proximity to the Arctic Circle.
Eroding spruce trees dangled from steep riverbanks into the water, their limbs dancing with the current in a deep, fast rhythm. “The thought went through my mind to be really careful here,” 58-year-old Nelson says. “These were not simple annoyances; they were serious obstacles.” No sooner had Nelson reminded himself of the dangerous situation than he rounded a bend and plowed straight into a fortress of heaving branches. “I knew I was going to hit it,” he recalls. “There was no way I could miss it.” The boat hit the sweeper, flipped over and became tangled in spruce boughs. “Well, this could be it,” thought Nelson, who, even with his life jacket on, couldn’t tell up from down as he descended below the water’s surface.
* * *
The Nelson family moved to Columbia from Kissimmee, Fla., when Nelson’s father accepted a position with the University of Missouri College of Veterinary Medicine. “Being a kid in Missouri, I loved the outdoors,” says Nelson, who spent much of his free time canoeing and camping around the state. The family traveled to Alaska in 1967, and it was there that Nelson had his first taste of the Last Frontier. “I went up to that big country, saw the land, the beautiful rivers, the mountains,” Nelson remembers. “It captured my imagination.” Nelson, a Hickman High School alumnus, later attended veterinary school at MU. In 1995, he became the chief veterinarian for the Iditarod Dog Sled Race — although because the 1,161-mile race across Alaska is a once-a-year event (beginning the first Saturday in March), Nelson also practices in Sandpoint, Idaho. “The Iditarod is my full-time part-time job,” he jokes.
Every August, Nelson takes a “river month” in the Canadian wilderness. He’s completed 18 solo kayak trips, which adds up to about 6,000 miles of paddling in the Yukon. All of those trips have ended successfully — except his 2010 expedition. “This year was the first time I didn’t come out on my own,” he says. “I had to be rescued.”
* * *
When Nelson crawled out of the river on the afternoon of Aug. 23, his boat was pinned under the branches of the dying spruce. He felt stunned, shocked from the collision and the icy water. His No. 1 rule, “make no mistakes,” had been shattered. He climbed onto the tree and tried to free his boat. He pushed and pulled without success. He held onto the on sweeper and jumped on the kayak, which caused the current to spit the craft into the raging current. Nelson plummeted under water once more and realized his No. 2 rule was now broken: Never get separated from your boat. He tried to swim after his kayak — and the items stowed inside, which included his passport, cash, credit cards, driver’s license and satellite phone — but more sweepers intervened. He felt himself growing heavier in the water and crawled to the shore. He walked along Little Wind for seven hours with no sign of the boat. Around 11 p.m., he lay down to rest. Nelson awoke at dawn and continued his search, eating wild currents and blueberries as he walked. By the time he reached the larger Wind River, he’d accepted that his boat was gone. Suddenly, he heard an airplane flying down the Little Wind. Clad in neutral colors, he jumped wildly and ran sideways, hoping to move into the pilot’s line of sight. “My natural instinct was to yell,” he says, “which was totally stupid because he couldn’t hear me.” The plane passed, and Nelson began to assess his situation. A large gravel bar sprawled along the confluence of the Little
Nelson plummeted under water once more and realized his No. 2 rule was now broken:
Never get separated from your boat.
WildLost in the A Story of Survival in theLast Frontier By Whitney Dreier
Phtotos By L.G. Patterson
By Whitney DreierPhtotos By L.G. PattersonA Story of Survival in the Last Frontier
WildLost in the
Stuart Nelson Jr. paddled his kayak expertly down the Little Wind River. The late August weather was warm and sunny, despite Nelson’s proximity to the Arctic Circle. Eroding spruce
trees dangled from steep riverbanks into the water, their limbs dancing with the current in a deep, fast rhythm. “The thought went through my mind to be really careful here,” 58-year-old Nelson says. “These were not simple annoyances; they were serious obstacles.” No sooner had Nelson reminded himself of the dangerous situation than he rounded a bend and plowed straight into a fortress of heaving branches. “I knew I was going to hit it,” he recalls. “There was no way I could miss it.” The boat hit the sweeper, flipped over and became tangled in spruce boughs. “Well, this could be it,” thought Nelson, who, even with his life jacket on, couldn’t tell up from down as he descended below the water’s surface.
* * *
The Nelson family moved to Columbia from Kissimmee, Fla., when Nelson’s father accepted a position with the University of Missouri College of Veterinary Medicine. “Being a kid in Missouri, I loved the outdoors,” says Nelson, who spent much of his free time canoeing and camping around the state. The family traveled to Alaska in 1967, and it was there that Nelson had his first taste of the Last Frontier. “I went up to that big country, saw the land, the beautiful rivers, the mountains,” Nelson remembers. “It captured my imagination.” Nelson, a Hickman High School alumnus, later attended veterinary school at MU. In 1995, he became the chief veterinarian for the Iditarod Dog Sled Race — although because the 1,161-mile race across Alaska is a once-a-year event (beginning the first Saturday in March), Nelson also practices in Sandpoint, Idaho. “The Iditarod is my full-time part-time job,” he jokes. Every August, Nelson takes a “river month” in the Canadian wil-
derness. He’s completed 18 solo kayak trips, which adds up to about 6,000 miles of paddling in the Yukon. All of those trips have ended successfully — except his 2010 expedition. “This year was the first time I didn’t come out on my own,” he says. “I had to be rescued.”
* * *
When Nelson crawled out of the river on the afternoon of Aug. 23, his boat was pinned under the branches of the dying spruce. He felt stunned, shocked from the collision and the icy water. His No. 1 rule, “make no mistakes,” had been shattered. He climbed onto the tree and tried to free his boat. He pushed and pulled without success. He held onto the on sweeper and jumped on the kayak, which caused the current to spit the craft into the raging current. Nelson plummeted under water once more and realized his No. 2 rule was now broken: Never get separated from your boat. He tried to swim after his kayak — and the items stowed inside, which included his passport, cash, credit cards, driver’s license and satellite phone — but more sweepers intervened. He felt himself growing heavier in the water and crawled to the shore. He walked along Little Wind for seven hours with no sign of the boat. Around 11 p.m., he lay down to rest. Nelson awoke at dawn and continued his search, eating wild currents and blueberries as he walked. By the time he reached the larger Wind River, he’d accepted that his boat was gone. Suddenly, he heard an airplane flying down the Little Wind. Clad in neutral colors, he jumped wildly and ran sideways, hoping to move into the pilot’s line of sight. “My natural instinct was to yell,” he says, “which was totally stupid because he couldn’t hear me.” The plane passed, and Nelson began to assess his situation. A large gravel bar sprawled along the confluence of the Little Wind and Wind Rivers. “What do I need for survival?” he thought, reviewing
Nelson plummeted under water once more and realized his No. 2 rule was now broken:
Never get separated from your boat.
Lost in the Wild (Drafts)
12 12
Project 1 - Inside Columbia: Final Execution
Lost in the Wild (First Page)
13
Project 1 - Inside Columbia: Final Execution
Lost in the Wild (Second Page)
14 14
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Intqake
Kaylyn Crane 14
Intake
15 15
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Creative D
ev. Worksheet
Brainstorming
16 16
Contents & Visual LayoutsProject 2 - Stephens Life: C
reative Dev. Worksheet
17 17
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Creative D
ev. Worksheet
Possible Layouts Identity
18 18
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Creative D
ev. WorksheetBrainstorming
19 19
Possible Color Choices
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Research
Stephens Life Research
20 20
Project 2 - Stephens Life: ResearchLayout Research
21 21
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Research
Layout Research
22 22
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Computer Play
Kaylyn Crane 22
Possible Flags
23 23
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Computer Play
Department Page
24 24
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Computer Play
Editorial Page Drafts
25 25
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Computer Play
Editorial Page Drafts
26 26
Visual Spread DraftsProject 2 - Stephens Life: C
omputer Play
27 27
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Computer Play
Departing Drafts
Morocco
MoroccoMorocco
The Wanderlust Senior Collection 2012
The Wanderlust Senior Collection 2012
The Wanderlust Senior Collection 2012
Possible Font Choices
28 28
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Final ExecutionFinished Cover & Department
29 29
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Final Execution
Finsihed Editorial
30 30
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Final ExecutionFinished Visual Spread (Page 1)
31 31
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Final Execution
Finished Visual Spread (Page 2)
32 32
Project 2 - Stephens Life: Final ExecutionFinished Departing & Visual Identity
33 33
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Intake
Intake
34 34
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Creative D
ev. WorksheetBrainstorming
35 35
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Creative D
ev. Worksheet
Brainstorming
36 36
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Creative D
ev. WorksheetBrainstorming
37 37
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Creative D
ev. Worksheet
Brainstorming
38 38
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Creative D
ev. WorksheetBrainstorming
39 39
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Creative D
ev. Worksheet
Brainstorming
40 40
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: ResearchCompetition: Travel Magazines Running Destinations in Use
41 41
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Research
Running Destinations in Use
42 42
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: ResearchCompetition: Running Magazines Possible Color Choices
43 43
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Research
Magazine Research
44 44
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: ResearchMagazine Research
45 45
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Research
Magazine Research
46 46
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: ResearchMagazine Research
47 47
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Research
Magazine Research
48 48
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Enlarged IdeasCover Layout Ideas
49 49
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Computer Play Charm
CharmCharm
Charm
Flag Ideas Header Fonts
50 50
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Computer Play
Feature Spread Drafts
51 51
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Computer Play
Feature Spread Draft Table of Contents Draft
52 52
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Final ExecutionFinal Cover Final Table of Contents
53 53
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Final Execution
Final Feature (Page 1)
54 54
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Final ExecutionFinal Feature (Page 2)
55 55
Project 3 - Design Your Own M
ag.: Final Execution
Visual Identity
56
Mini Project Section
57
Mini Project 1 - Love Letter: Ideas
Brainstorming
58
Mini Project 1 - Love Letter
Love Letter
I have chosen “Kingthings Willowless” in the letter “o” because it has a specific, decorative quality that would work well in certain cases, such as being used as a header to grab the attention of the viewer. I also like the fact that it isn’t overly decorative and the semi circle cut outs along both sides add another dimension of detail without being gaudy. I also like the organic feel of the swirls because
it gives it just enough oomph to make it fun, especially in the use of a children’s book or for holiday uses like Halloween.
Infographic
If a group of women are standing together but their eyes are wandering, they are likely to be looking for guys. If they each take a turn to break away from the group tot head to the bathroom alone, they are on the prowl. If they are
huddled together giggling, they are usually not interested in finding men.
59 59
Mini Project 2 - C
reate Your Own Bus.: Intake
Intake: Emily Park
60 60
Mini Project 2 - C
reate Your Own Bus.: C
reative Dev.
Brainstorming
61 61
Mini Project 2 - C
reate Your Own Bus.: D
raftsBus. Card & Letterhead Drafts
62 62
Mini Project 2 - C
reate Your Own Bus.: Final D
esign
Final Bus. Card & Letterhead
63 63
Mini Project 2 - C
reate Your Own Bus.: Printing Spec. Sheets
Bus. Card Spec Sheet Letterhead Spec Sheet
64 64
Mini Project 3 - Olive Oil: Research
Research
65 65
Mini Project 3 - Olive Oil: Final
Finished Spread
66
Read, Reflect & Report Section
67
Read, Reflect, & Report
Ch. 6
68 68
Read, Reflect, & ReportCh. 10
69 69