SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATION

CMNS 473-4

Janet Russell HC c/o 604-291-5212 email: greenchain2@telus.net
Fall 2002
Anne Ahmad HC c/o 604-291-5212 email: asahmad@sfu.ca
Harbour Centre Eve.
   




PUBLICATION DESIGN & PRINT PRODUCTION


Prerequisites:


75 credit hours including CMNS 375. A working knowledge of the Macintosh and its operating system is MANDATORY.

Course Goals:


Publication design concepts and production fundamentals are an essential part of publishing. This course provides a basic understanding for students who expect to either work in these areas or supervise those who do. The course material covers the basic principles of publication design, typography, printing, cost estimating, and computer applications in publishing. It focuses on several publishing formats: books, periodicals (newsletters, magazines, etc.), promotional materials and corporate publishing.
The course will be divided into a 2-hour lecture and a 1-hour lab each week. The lab will take place in the computer publishing lab at Harbour Centre. There are three of the 1-hour labs scheduled.
Lecture: Thursdays, 17:30-19:20, HC 1415.
Labs: Thursdays,
Lab E1.01,15:30 – 16:20 HC 2960;
Lab. E1.02, 16:30 – 17:20 HC 2960
Lab. E1.03, 19:30 – 20:20 HC 2960
*Please note: There will be no labs the first class (Thursday, September 5th).
Assignments are produced on a Macintosh computer using PageMaker (or QuarkXPress). Students design and prepared publishing projects, develop grids for different formats, produce mock-ups, and develop printer specifications. Students also design and mock-up several spreads of a publication (either a book or a magazine) for their final project.
This course is "Portfolio Driven". You can expect to spend from $20 to $60 (or more, depending on what your project is . . .) on developing your portfolio.
There will be a final exam on design theory. It is worth 20% of your mark. You will be tested on the handouts from lectures. The rest of the course is evaluated on project work and a final portfolio.


Course Outline:


1. Thursday September 5th:
Introduction: Course Outline
Lecture: Measuring in Graphic Design (points, picas, leading, type sizes . . . ) - exercises
Homework: Do: The Measuring Exercise bring for next week.

2. Thursday September 12th:
Correct: The Measuring Exercise
Lecture: Design Process From Concept to Print
Assign: Ad Designs
Homework: Design: Thumbnails and a rough of your ads bring for next class.

3. Thursday September 19th:
Look At; Thumbnails and a rough of your ad
Lecture: Scanning and File Formats
Lecture: 4 Principles of Design/Clip Art/Ad Design/Creativity Printing Tutorial
Homework: Design: Comp of your ads bring for next class.

4. Thursday September 26th:
Due: Ad Design Projects
Assign: Newsletter/Menu Redesign Project
Lecture: Introduction to Typography

5. Thursday October 3rd:
Lectures:
How We Read
Typesetting Concerns
The Perfect Paragraph
Homework: Design: Thumbnails and a rough of your newsletter grid, for next class.

6. Thursday October 10th:
Thumbnails and a rough of your newsletter.
Lecture: Banner Design
Lecture: Designing Grids assign grid construction exercises
Homework: Keep working on: Your newsletter or menu design
Design: Thumbnails of your final project interviews will begin next week.

7. Thursday October 17th:
Lecture: Page Elements
Homework: Keep working on: Your newsletter/menu design due next week; Thumbnails of your final project interviews will continue next week.
Thumbnail Reviews: We will begin meeting with students individually to discuss their final projects.

8. Thursday October 24th:
Due: Newsletter/Menu design comp
Assign: Final Project
Demo: Special Papers
Lecture: The Multipage Environment
Thumbnail Reviews: We will continue meeting with students individually to discuss their final projects.

9. Thursday October 3lst:
Lectures: Art Reproduction (halftones, color, etc.)
Homework: Gather elements for your final project text, photos, etc. Thumbnail Reviews: We will
continue meeting with students individually to discuss their final projects.

10. Thursday November 7th:
Lecture: Nine Classifications of Type
Thumbnail Reviews: We will continue meeting with students individually to discuss their final projects.
Gather: Elements for your final project text, photos, etc.

11. Thursday November 14th:
Lecture: Resumes, Portfolio Concerns; Printing
Estimates; Business Considerations
Finalize: All elements for your final project text, photos, etc. HINT: make sure you have all your thumbnails, roughs and graphics log are in order they are worth almost half of your mark!
Think: About the whole presentation of your portfolio. Go Shopping!

12. Thursday Novembe 21st:
Work and Consult Class

13: Thursday November 28th:
Due: at 5:30 Final Project design comps
Portfolio Party: 5:30 -- 7:00 at Harbour Centre to show off all your great work.
Final Exam: Thursday, December 5, 2002 19:00 – 22:00. Room TBA.

Course Evaluation:


PageMaker Exercises 15% (Due: _________________)
Ad Design 15% (Due: _________________)
Newsletter or Menu Redesign 20% (Due: _________________)
Final Project 20% (Due: _________________)
Professionalism & Attendance 10%
Final Exam 20%
**Professional Conduct and Participation: This mark is determined by an number of things. Your:
Attendance
Punctuality
Participation
Attitude
Ability to meet deadlines
Ability to follow instructions
Coolness under pressure
Conduct in lab


For Design Projects:

You will be asked to keep a Graphics Log of all the images you have used in your design solutions, i.e., where you got the image, what resolution you scanned it at, what manipulations you might have visited upon it in Photoshop, etc. You will also be asked to include a black and white printout of your project. This greatly speeds up our marking, and means we won’t have to mark directly on your finished comprehensives.
All assignments are to be handed to me personally in class on the specified due date. They should be in a file folder with your name on it, and contain the marking sheet we have given you. 10% per day will be deducted from late project work.
If you absolutely have to hand in something late, please insure it has been date-stamped at the Extension Credit Programs before putting it in our box. If it's not date-stamped we cannot accept it. (Unless it has been sent by courier!)

Course Attendance & Policy:

Don't miss any good stuff!!! Attendance is a key success factor, so please attend class and be on time. You will be responsible for any announcements/information which is given in any class you missed. Please contact a classmate, not us, for this information. You will be asked to sign in at the beginning of each class . . . it is your responsibility to make sure you do.
CMNS 473 is very detail-driven -- we sweat the small stuff! It's also about the design process and project (time) management. If you are an unorganized or slap-dash type person, you will find this course extremely challenging! Please try to treat us as you would a client. If you have a computer tragedy, fall ill or whatever, and have to miss a deadline, ask yourself how would I handle this if it were a real project with a real client?" A word of warning . . . clients are never very interested in excuses!!! They want solutions, on time! So do instructors!!! That said, lets have a fun and productive semester!!!!!

Required Text:


Proot, Kevin G., Adobe PageMaker 6.5 Illustrated Series. Course Technology (an International Thomson Publishing Co.) ISBN 0-7600-5569-6
CMNS 473 Book: A Compilation of Related Handouts and Articles -- this will be sold, at cost, during the first class for approximately $20.00.
PageMaker 6 Courseware: this is sold in the library for approximately $20.00..

Recommended Texts:

Williams, Robin, The Non-Designer's Design Book: Design and Typographic Principles for the Visual Novice. Peachpit Press, Berkeley, CA 1994 ISBN 1-56609-159-4


The School expects that the grades awarded in this course will bear some reasonable relation to established university-wide practices to both levels and distribution of grades. In addition, the School will also follow Policy T10.02 with respect to intellectual Honesty, and academic Discipline (see the current Calendar, General Regulations Section).