Tuesday 27 February 2018

OUGD503 - SB02 - StarPack - Research

OUGD503 

SB02 


StarPack - Research


Target Market
Middle aged, middle class women. Shop in higher end retailers such as John Lewis and Marks and Spencer

Existing packaging
Visual Research of existing products in this fields






Client
Sponsored by Metal Packaging Manufacturing Assosiation
MPMA is the lead voice of the UK metal packaging industry. The Association supports and represents members' on industry matters related to operational, regulatory and environmental issues. The assosiation belives that no metal packaging should go to landfill. They want the industry to use resources more efficiently, avoiding spoilage and improving the recovery of materials.
They strive for 60 percent of all metal packaging to be recycled.

The produced product has to be suitable for other uses once its function of holding tea is over. 

Materials
The material used is tinplate. Tinplate is made from sheets of steel, coated with a thin layer of tin. 

History of tea.
Legend suggests that tea dates back to 2737 BC in China where it was created by accident by a servant of Chinese emperor Shen Nung. It was under the Tang Dynasty (618-906 AD) That tea became a firmly established as the national drink if China.

The Dutch first brought tea over to Europe as they began to follow some of the Portuguese trading routes. Tea first came to Britain in the 1600’s as sailors for the British East India Company would have brought it home as gifts. Tea didn’t begin to gain popularity until Charles second married Catherine of Braganza, who would drink tea in court. The East India Company capitalised on this in 1664, ordering 11lbs of China tea to be shipped from Java.

A tax was introduced to tea in 1689 which got so high it almost stopped the sale of tea in Britain. It also meant that tea was only accessible by the wealthy. Another consequence of the tax was smuggling. This small illegal trade grew into organised criminal networks.

In 1784, the new Prime Minister William Pitt the Younger realised the effect of the tax and slashed it from 119 percent to 12.5 percent, stopping the smuggling trade instantly.

After 1834 and the government take-over of the East India Company the tea trade became a free for all. Captains and crews would race to bring back tea to Britain and make the most profit. The trade route would take merchants from Canton River, down the China Sea, across the Indian Ocean, around the Cape of Good Hope, up the Atlantic and into the English Channel.

The London Tea Auction
The London Tea Auction lasted 300 years. It was a regular event which made London the centre of the international tea trade. The first auctions were held by the East India Company at the company’s headquarters on Leadenhall Street also known as East India House

The East India Company
The company was formed in 1600. At its peak, it had a monopoly on British trade with India and the far East. It grew to become very powerful with Charles the second granting the company to take military action to establish itself in places it wished to trade.

The brief calls for a factitious brand to be made, from the research I have found that the following names are appropriate:

Possible names
Shen Nungs Secret Brew
Smugglers brew
Princesses’ brew  
Younger’s Tea
Younger’s
China Sea’s Finest
Leadenhall Street Tea
East India House Brew



How is Tea Made?

Tea leaves are plucked. They are them processed at a factory. Tea is graded into black, green, white and Oolong, Leaves are then classified by size, type and appearance. Black, green and white teas are all very similar. It’s the production method that transforms them.







Monday 26 February 2018

OUGD503 - SB02 - StarPack - Brief


OUGD503

SB02

Collaborative Practise StarPack

Brief

For this brief we will be entering the Student StarPack 2018 competition. we will answer brief F. This is luxury gift packaging for a family of teas or coffees.

Summary:
Design and develop a prestigious range of luxury gift packaging representing metal as the primary material for a range of either teas or coffees
Sponsored by MPMA. (metal Packaging Manufactures Association) 

Deadline Friday 23 March 2018

Brief in full:


I will be working in collaboration with Lucy Siviter, a level 5 Printed Textiles design student. 



Collaborative Brief





Action Plan





Creative Contract





Lucy's Work



Lucy's work is heavily flora based, her practise also involves a lot of water colour work. However, we have discussed the potential of her creating an illustrator design as this would be a good opportunity to improve her digital skills.


Friday 23 February 2018

OUGD505 - SB02 - Crit Feedback

OUGD505

SB02

Crit Feedback


Presenting the idea:
A festival for 16 - 18 year old girls to encourage the uptake of physical activity in a safe and encouraging environment. The festival has to take all the factors that girls enjoy about festivals and physical activity without feeling forced or childish.

MoodBoard
Feedback

- Colours: Coral, orange,

- Carnival Theme

- Stay away from red, white and blue. Too corporate and competitive

- During the day the festival has a range of classes, games and 'Give it a Goes'. In the evening there will be an open air cinema showing films like Bend it Like Beckham, Wimbledon, Run fat boy run and Eddie the Eagle.

- Need insentives for participation: Pamper sessions, juice bars, glitter etc.

- Encourage healthy eating, frozen yogurt instead of ice cream

- Must feel like a festival rather than a sporting event

- Design must avoid feeling childish, stay away from illustrations. 

- Involve movement in the design

- Has to have a strong character

- One Key thing that brings every one together, a main event.

- Attractive and inclusive to all girls, strong not girly

- A what happened last year video

- Has to appeal to those who aren't sporty

- Focus on ticket design, line ups

- Spin Classes to live music

- New types of sport, people like seeing new things at festivals / new experiences


References

Jamie Oliver's 'The Big Festival'

A food and Music Festival

Wilderness



Wilderness festival celebrate the idea and include outdoor activities and games in the programme. 


Boardmaster

Surf and Music Festival


Thursday 22 February 2018

OUGD505 - SB02 - Target Audience Research


OUGD505

SB02

Target Audience Research

The target audience is very specific. 16, 17 and 18 year old girls in full time education.

Most young people have been to a music festival by the age of 18. I want to find out what makes young people go to festival (apart from the music aspect). I want to hightlight the more positive factors of what people enjoy about festivals rather than the obvious 'sex, drugs and rock 'n' roll.'

What people enjoy about festivals:
- The atmosphere
- Being surrounded by people that have similar interests, like-minded people
- Its easy to meet new people
- Escapism, sense of being in a different world
- step away from the stressful everyday.
- sense of belonging
- freedom

Youth festivals

Underage Festivals
This music festival took place in Victoria Park, London between 2007 and 2012. It was open only to teenagers aged between 13 to 17. 

Branding


Sporting festivals / events

The Street Games
supports 4,000 young people to have a great day out at 4 multi-sport festivals every year. The festival provides the opportunity for participants from a local community or region to come together and compete. 

School Games
School Games Festival  regional or countywide festivals and competitions are usually held twice a year to find the best performers in the area as a culmination of school sport competition.


The branding for both School Games and The Street Games is young, the branding for the girls only festival has to to youthful without being childish.

Sporting events with a similar ethos to festivals include mass participation sporting events such as the Great North Swim and Race for Life. These events are less competitive and more about getting active, taking part or raising money for a good cause.





Youth Marketing

Research into the student demographic (16 - 24 year olds). Students account for almost half of the UK's youth demographic and around 97% use Facebook, with 45% on twitter. This shows the reach of social media marketing.

What do young people care about when it comes to branding and marketing?
- Transparency 
- Credability
- Consistency
- The ability to make an independent choice



Wednesday 21 February 2018

OUGD505 - SB02 - Ideas

OUGD505 

SB02 


Ideas

Considerations

The product must promote what women enjoy about sport
- safety and escape
- friends and socialising
- challenges and achievements
- enjoyment
- fitness and oppertunity

Idea 1
Create an app that incorporates all the considerations listed above. Promotes social activity, rewards achievements. Girls only, helps find girls in the area that are interested in the same activity so participants don't have to start a new sport/activity by themselves, which can be daunting. 

Idea 2
Ad campaign aimed specifically at post 16 centres and colleges that will get girls excited about sport and information on local places where they can join in in activity.

Idea 3
Festival event that encourages activeness and exercise rather than traditional sports. Focusing on trying new activities and meeting people who will continue in the activity after the festival is over. Meet up and social interaction. Designing Tickets, wristbands, programmes and posters.

I will develop idea 3 further. I think this idea is different and can be shown across many touch points. It could incorporate and app as well as posters, maps, wristbands, social media etc. 


BA (hons) Graphic Design

Design Practice 2: Studio Brief 2 / Range, Product, Distribution

Name

Lorna Milligan

Brief title

Fitness Festival

Brief (outline the general aims of the project)

A festival of fitness and physical activity aimed specifically at girls ages 16 to 18 to encourage them to take up sport. The festival will focus on the social and fun side of sport rather than being competitive and serious. It will celebrate achievement and promote enjoyment in a safe environment. The aim is that girls will meet like-minded people outside of school friendship groups that they can participate in activities together. This is in response to one of the main deterrents for participation for this age range, going to classes or new activities on their own.


Background / considerations

There is a huge drop in participation in sport for girls aged 16 – 18. This is commonly known as the post 16 gap as many girls find it difficult to continue in sport due to it not being part of the curriculum (no longer passive), time restraints and lack of motivation. For the festival to be successful it must promote what girls enjoy about sport while addressing the barriers that prevent participation.


Deliverables
Programme
Posters
Wristbands
Tickets
Lanyards
Maps
Merch (t-shirts, jumpers)

Mandatory requirements (essential requirements that must be followed)
Clear set style across all platforms. Specifically aimed at 16 to 18-year-old girls. Tailored teenage aesthetic. Design that promotes a fun environment, not a competitive one.


Research: references & sources
This Girl Can
Race for life
Tough Mudder