Misplaced Pages

Communication design

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Visual design) Academic discipline
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
This article may be confusing or unclear to readers. Please help clarify the article. There might be a discussion about this on the talk page. (July 2015) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Communication design" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2007) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
(Learn how and when to remove this message)

Communication design is a mixed discipline between design and information-development concerned with how media communicate with people. A communication design approach is concerned with developing the message and aesthetics in media. It also creates new media channels to ensure the message reaches the target audience. Due to overlapping skills, some designers use graphic design and communication design interchangeably.

Communication design can also refer to a systems-based approach, in which the totality of media and messages within a culture or organization are designed as a single integrated process rather than a series of discrete efforts. This is done through communication channels that aim to inform and attract the attention of the target audience. Design skills must be used to create content suitable for different cultures and to maintain a pleasurable visual design. These are crucial pieces of a successful media communications kit.

Within the Communication discipline, the emerging framework for Communication as Design focuses on redesigning interactivity and shaping communication affordances. Software and applications create opportunities for and place constraints on communication. Recently, Guth and Brabham examined the way that ideas compete within a crowdsourcing platform, providing a model for the relationships among design ideas, communication, and platform. The same authors have interviewed technology company founders about the democratic ideals they build into the design of e-government applications and technologies. Interest in the Communication as Design framework continues growing among researchers.

Overview

Communication design seeks to attract, inspire, and motivate people to respond to messages and to make favorable impact. This impact oriented toward the objectives of the commissioning body, which can be either to build a brand or move sales. It can also range from changing behaviors, to promoting a message, to disseminating information. The process of communication design involves strategic business thinking, including using market research, creativity, problem-solving, and technical skills and knowledge such as colour theory, page layout, typography, and creating visual hierarchies. Communication designers translate ideas and information through a variety of media. In order to establish credibility and influence audiences through the communication, communication designers use both traditional tangible skills and the ability to think strategically in design and marketing terms.

The term communication design is often used interchangeably with visual communication, but it maintains a broader meaning that includes auditory, vocal, touch, and olfactory senses. Examples of communication design practices include information architecture, editing, typography, illustration, web design, animation, advertising, ambient media, visual identity design, performing arts, copywriting and professional writing skills applied in the creative industries.

Education

Students of communication design learn how to create visual messages and broadcast them to the world in new and meaningful ways. In the complex digital environment around us, communication design has become a powerful means of reaching out to the target audiences. Therefore, it expands its focus beyond user-experiences to user-networks. Students learn how to combine communication with art and technology. The communication design discipline involves teaching how to design web pages, video games, animation, motion graphics, and more.

Communication Design has content as its main purpose. It must achieve a reaction, or get a customer to see a product in a genuine way to attract sales or effectively communicate a message. Communication design students are often Illustrators, Graphic Designers, Web designers, Advertising artists, Animators, Video Editors, Motion graphic artists, Printmakers, and Conceptual Artists. The term communications design is fairly general considering its interdisciplinary practitioners operate within various mediums to get a message across.

Subdisciplines

Visual communication design

Visual communication design is the design working in any media or support of visual communication. This is considered by some to be more accurate alternative terminology to cover all types of design applied in communication. It uses a visual channel for message transmission, reflecting the visual language inherent to some media. Unlike the terms graphic design (graphics) or interface design (electronic media), it is not limited to support a particular form of content.

Print media design

Print media design is a graphic design discipline that creates designs for printed media. Print design involves the creation of flyers, brochures, book covers, t-shirt prints, business cards, booklets, bookmarks, envelope designs, signs, letterheads, posters, CD cover, print media design templates, and more. The goal of print design is to use visual graphics to communicate a specific message to viewers.

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-04-13. Retrieved 2014-10-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. Aakhus, Mark (2007-03-01). "Communication as Design". Communication Monographs. 74 (1): 112–117. doi:10.1080/03637750701196383. ISSN 0363-7751. S2CID 143543646.
  3. Guth, Kristen L.; Brabham, Daren C. (2017-08-04). "Finding the diamond in the rough: Exploring communication and platform in crowdsourcing performance". Communication Monographs. 84 (4): 510–533. doi:10.1080/03637751.2017.1359748. ISSN 0363-7751. S2CID 54045924.
  4. Brabham, Daren C.; Guth, Kristen L. (2017-08-01). "The Deliberative Politics of the Consultative Layer: Participation Hopes and Communication as Design Values of Civic Tech Founders". Journal of Communication. 67 (4): 445–475. doi:10.1111/jcom.12316. ISSN 1460-2466.
  5. ^ Aakhus, Mark (2007). "Communication as Design". Communication Monographs. 74 (1): 112–117. doi:10.1080/03637750701196383. ISSN 0363-7751.
  6. Albadi, Noorh; Zollinger, Stephanie Watson (2021-07-26). "Dominant Learning Styles of Interior Design Students in Generation Z". Journal of Interior Design. 46 (4): 49–65. doi:10.1111/joid.12204. ISSN 1071-7641.
  7. Martins, Nuno; Raposo, Daniel, eds. (2023). Communication Design and Branding: A Multidisciplinary Approach. Springer Series in Design and Innovation. Vol. 32. Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland. doi:10.1007/978-3-031-35385-7. ISBN 978-3-031-35384-0.
  8. Herfurth, Lorenz (2023-04-01). "The dynamics of practice and their relevance for the development of an open studio culture in design education". Art, Design & Communication in Higher Education. 22 (1): 89–106. doi:10.1386/adch_00063_1. ISSN 1474-273X.
  9. Craib, David; Imbesi, Lorenzo (2015). "Perception, Meaning, and Design: An Interdisciplinary Exploration of Visual Communication Design Theory". The International Journal of Visual Design. 9 (2): 13–26. doi:10.18848/2325-1581/CGP/v09i02/38758. ISSN 2325-1581.
  10. MUNARI, Bruno. Design and visual communication. Chronicle Books, 2006
  11. WOLLNER, Alexandre. Visual Design 50 years. Cosac & Naify, 2003
  12. LANGENFELDS, Ranya. Visual design. TEAME, 1997
  13. ^ Davis, Meredith; Hunt, Jamer (2017). Visual Communication Design: An introduction to design concepts in everyday experience (1 ed.). Bloomsbury Publishing Plc. doi:10.5040/9781474208468. ISBN 978-1-4742-0846-8.
  14. LEEUWEN, Theo Van. Reading images: the grammar of visual design. Routledge, 2006 - Pg. 4
  15. FRASCARA, Jorge. Communication design: principles, methods, and practice. Allworth Communications, Inc., 2004 - Pg. 4
  16. GARRET, Lillian. Visual design: a problem-solving approach. Michigan: R. E. Krieger Pub. Co., 1975.
  17. ^ MEGGS, Philip B. A history of graphic design. Michigan, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1992 - Pg.xiii Preface

External links

Communication studies
Topics and
terminology
Encoding communication
Subfields
Scholars
Design
Disciplines
Communication
design
Environmental
design
Industrial
design
Interaction
design
Other
applied arts
Other
design
& engineering
Approaches
  • Tools
  • Intellectual property
  • Organizations
  • Awards
Tools
Intellectual
property
Organizations
Awards
Related topics
Categories: