Sunday, 2 June 2013

Rationale


My idea was to create an infographic that gives a presentation on PSA- what it is, what it does etc.
I used colours that are considered to be 'kiwifruit' colours to help show that its about kiwifruit. Such as green and brown.

I wanted to keep my infographic at a professional level, as PSA is quite a serious matter. So when I was coming up with ideas on how to show my pages, I was coming up with animations that were really effective and showed what the needed to, but they were not professional and serious enough.
If I was to go back and use animations, I would change my audience to children, as they need animations to help them understand and keep them interested.

I think that my final product is easy to navigate, and it shows accurate information. It is very simple, but I think that simple animations can be effective too. My favorite part is the big brown spot that grows on every page. I really like this because it keeps the professional level, but also shows, on a simple level, what PSA looks like and how it works.

Final Touch ups and decision making


I decided to change my colours and arrangements to suite my theme more. I also decided to make all my pages the same, so it would look more professional and systematic.

Title Page

Page One- What is PSA?

Page Two- What does it look like?

Flash Trials


Here I am starting to get my information and imagery into flash and playing round with presentation:

just playing with my info- how it is shown

playing with animation- PSA grows and spreads, so I wanted to
show the growth in a simple form


PSA is still in the process of being researched,
so I thought the magnifying glass was a nice feature




Trying to come up with a professional way of
showing how the disease spreads 

Idea for the title page- how it will pop up

All three letters come together as the dot grows.



Playing with Flash


Here is my first go using Flash

Here are some simple buttons and a moving ball

I was playing with my theme's imagery with flash-
using motion tweens to zoom in and out on the image.