Monday, September 23, 2013

Marla Spivak: Why bees are disappearing



A great understanding of the effects of disturbances in biodiversity.

Illustration Style Explorations

Here's a look at the possible directions in which the illustration style can head:


Silhouettes in water colour
well defined, coloured illustrations in water colour and pen
using textures as cut outs with silhouettes


black and white, silhouettes


well defined, detailed, black and white strokes.

The Plot

Here's a graph that charts the plot of the storybook, dividing it between the journey of the monkey through the entire timeline, interspersed with the accounts of the other characters.


Page Division for text using Canons

The written content for the storybook exceeds 4000 words, making it text heavy. For that purpose, it makes it important for layout to be able to occasionally accommodate large chunks of text. The Canons, an ancient technique of page division, were a rule of thumb applied to the layout for harmonious division.

Let's see how this works on the page size chosen for this storybook.

To begin with, I was advised to design the storybook with the potential to be printed in offset. In the future, if we find the opportunity to print it in large numbers, offset printing is the cost effective way to do it and the layout should be according to a standard offset paper size.

The one-fourth demy paper size is suitable for a medium sized storybook for a mature audience, that is easy to carry around and store. Adhering to a standard paper-size also leads to the least amount of wastage of paper after cropping. The paper size finally chosen was 170 mm x 240 mm - a little short of the one-fourth demy.

The best way to visualize the book size is to draw it out on paper first and crop it to the original size. It helps one fold the spread along the spine and actualize the dimensions. Doing this led to three iterations before settling for the final size. 




Next, the canon was drawn on the spread to create the smaller boxes as the text distribution area. Applying a canons to a spread invariably leads to a smaller upper margin and larger lower margin, not making the text seem bottom-heavy or too much on the page. Canons lead to sufficient thumb space in the outer margins and an appropriate space in the inner margins to create a gutter for the spine allowing the book to be perfect bound, yet not lose text by bleeding it into the spine.

The best part is that Canons do so without the need to measure and calculate the space needed to meet the properties of thumb space and spine gutter. Moreover, the text area is proportionate to the actual page size. 
In this particular layout, the Honnecourt Canon has been used and tweaked slightly, yet the proportion is the same. Here's what it looks like.


Even though the type will be contained within the smaller rectangles, it can still be placed playfully. The images will break this grid to create interest and dynamism.