Wednesday, February 18, 2009

















































































I looked at quite a few storyboards in search of an artist that could really catch my attention, and whose style I could possibly emulate, as I have not done much storyboarding. I knew my search was over when I came across this story about a drink called Pia, created by artist Vinicius Menezes. I've found that he often zooms in on important aspects of that point in the story. There are plenty of interesting vantage points, and I love his use of color. The facial expressions are great, especially in the second one. His other art is worth a look as
well. You can find him on deviantART here:

Vinicius Menezes








Tuesday, February 17, 2009


I've started to make a storyboard for the HP project. Here's what I've got so far. It will be changing considerably as my design develops and my story changes. I would appreciate any comments.








Thursday, February 5, 2009

Process Book















I've put together a process book for the USB project. If you want to take a look, you can find it here:

http://www.daapspace.daap.uc.edu/files/download/deininan/QRlMjLeNAUt0UUg-JSWoNzA1QgmUdy3YAImPl9F9ki0

I also improved my original two Illustrator renderings...




Here's the final render, using a little more Alias and less Photoshop, along with the final Illustrator rendering...


More USBs



USBs for you and me

Here are some renderings of USBs I did branded to the Adidas brand. They range from a little bit of Alias and a lot of Photoshop to a little more Alias and a little less Photoshop. I think I will split these into categories.

These are half of the ones I did with mostly Photoshop.



Monday, February 2, 2009

Teknowledgies

Regrettably, I am not extremely tech-savvy, so when I find something new and am excited about it, there is a good chance that it has been around for ages and I am just now catching on. On that note, here are some technologies I've found that I think will be very useful in my HP design.




















Flash-based solid-state hard drives, originally utilized in low-cost computers for developing nations, then also for netbooks, may find a good application because of their reliability, low power consumption, size, and cost efficiency. This combined with extended capacity SD drives such as this one, which holds 2 TB of files, along with some kind of developed Live USB technology that would allow for the kind of easy upgradability I am looking for, may result in an interesting product.