Graphic Design Tools
The mind may be the most important graphic design tool.
Aside from technology, graphic design requires judgment and
creativity. Critical, observational, quantitative and
analytic thinking are required for design layouts and
rendering. If the executor is merely following a solution
(e.g. sketch, script or instructions) provided by another
designer (such as an art director), then the executor is not
usually considered the designer.
The method of presentation
(e.g. arrangement, style, medium) may be equally important
to the design. The layout is produced using external
traditional or digital image editing tools. The appropriate
development and presentation tools can substantially change
how an audience perceives a project.
In the mid 1980s, the
arrival of desktop publishing and graphic art software
applications introduced a generation of designers to
computer image manipulation and creation that had previously
been manually executed. Computer graphic design enabled
designers to instantly see the effects of layout or
typographic changes, and to simulate the effects of
traditional media without requiring a lot of space.
However,
traditional tools such as pencils or markers are useful even
when computers are used for finalization; a designer or art
director may hand sketch numerous concepts as part of the
creative process. Some of these sketches may even be shown
to a client for early stage approval, before the designer
develops the idea further using a computer and graphic
design software tools.
Computers are considered an
indispensable tool in the graphic design industry. Computers
New ideas can come by way of experimenting with tools and
methods. Some designers explore ideas using pencil and paper
to avoid creating within the limits of whatever computer
fonts, clipart, stock photos, or rendering filters (e.g.
Kai's Power Tools) are available on any particular
configuration. Others use many different mark-making tools
and resources from computers to sticks and mud as a means of
inspiring creativity. One of the key features of graphic
design is that it makes a tool out of appropriate image
selection in order to convey meaning.
Computers
and the creative process
There is some debate whether
computers enhance the creative process of graphic
design.
Rapid production from the computer allows many
designers to explore multiple ideas quickly with more detail
than what could be achieved by traditional hand-rendering or
paste-up on paper, moving the designer through the creative
process more quickly.
However, being faced with
limitless choices does not help isolate the best design
solution and can lead to endless iterations with no clear
design outcome. A graphic designer may use sketches to
explore multiple or complex ideas quickly without the distractions and complications of
software.
Hand-rendered comps are often used to get approval for an
idea execution before a design invests time to produce
finished visuals on a computer or in paste-up. The same
thumbnail sketches or rough drafts on paper may be used to
rapidly refine and produce the idea on the computer in a
hybrid process. This hybrid process is especially useful in
logo design where a software learning curve may detract from
a creative thought process. The
traditional-design/computer-production hybrid process may be
used for freeing one's creativity in page layout or image
development as well.
In the early days of
computer publishing, many 'traditional' graphic designers
relied on computer-savvy production artists to produce their
ideas from sketches, without needing to learn the computer
skills themselves. However, this practice has been
increasingly less common since the advent of desktop
publishing over 30 years ago. The use of computers and
graphics software is now taught in most graphic design
courses.
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