Here your vision becomes reality!

Introducing FabCity.in

by Intuitive Designs

Sunday, July 22nd, 2007

FabCity.in

We are proud to announce the arrival of the new FabCity.in design. This has been one of our favorite projects this year and we are excited about sharing it.

FabCity.in is the leading authority “for people who will invest, work, and live in Fab City, India’s semiconductor hub.”. The site is brim full of information about the development of Fab City, Fab City itself, Investment opportunities, and Hyderabad. The site also offers a nice real estate section to buy and sell several types of real estate including residential, commercial, industrial, and plot/land. Several advertising opportunities are also available on the site for interested parties.

The client gave us creative space to try several ideas on the design and we think the result turned out well. The site is meant to be inviting and friendly for site visitors. For this reason we decided to use bright and attractive colors. The client also specified that the site should be clean and easy to use, so we decided to make finding everything as easy as possible. Reaching everything in the site is in most cases as easy as 1 or 2 clicks and the design itself is not overwhelming with flashing graphics or features that distract from the main purposes of the site.

The site was also built using the Joomla content management system. This allowed us to develop special areas of the site such as the real estate section and dynamic site map. In the future, the site will also have a special job section and blog. Speaking of which, there is a job opening now for a blogger. If you have knowledge about the semiconductor industry in India, you may want to check it out here: http://www.fabcity.in/jobs/fab-jobs.html

Our main hope is that the site will be useful for those moving to or interested in Fab City. We’d love to hear your thoughts about it.

Intuitive Designs Presents Wise Bread

by Koldo Barroso

Thursday, June 21st, 2007

Wise Bread

Sometimes we have the opportunity of being commisioned to do the design for a subject that we personally like. In this case, we were fortunate enough to do just that.

We’ve been one of the daily readers of Wise Bread for awhile, so when we saw the chance of re-designing the site, we jumped on it. We believe Wise Bread is one of the most interesting sites on the Internet. By reading it we learn something new every day that we can put into practice in our dayly life, and it also helps us be more aware about how little things can make our life better and make Earth a better place to live.

Wise Bread is a web site where you can learn practical tricks and techniques about living in a frugal way without being depraved of the best things in life. For us, this is not just a matter of saving money, but a whole philosophy about saving energy in life and not wasting what life generously gives us. We think that the consumer habits in our modern society have driven us to a point where we don’t value enough what we have in our hands and we get too easily used to wasting things that are really valuable. “One man trash is another man’s treasure”, that’s part of the real deal.

It’s not necessary to live in an extreme way so you don’t waste most of the resources and goods that life provides you with. This is something that Wise Bread provides evidence of every day. And this involves habits of buying, planning the home economy, using energy resources wisely, recycling, cooking, and almost every action we take in life.

For the new design of Wise Bread, the client wanted to avoid any type of noticeable design as much as possible and to focus in the practicality of the site, in order to provide to the readers with an easy, clean and functional web site where the articles are the protagonists. So, besides providing a clean and spacious design for them, we mostly focused on making the reading experience better. This involved careful attention to the typography, line-spacing, font size, and overall organization of the content.

We hope you enjoy reading this wonderful web site and possibly helping this crazy world go round in a better way. And we hope you enjoy our work!

Cooking up a chef illustration

by Koldo Barroso

Friday, May 4th, 2007

chef

For the past few months, I have received some messages from other illustrators and designers asking about the technics I used to do the illustration of the chef at the home page of our web site. Personally, I subscribe to the words from Tricky (the English musician): ‘When a musician tells me about the way he did a song, I immediately distrust him’. I don’t believe in methods and I think each work should become a new adventure to figure out which techniques may suit it better. This way, work always becomes a fun game. On the contrary, without this sense of making mistakes and solving new problems it would become the most boring thing on earth.

So, I’m not going to write a tutorial for illustrators. For me, the best thing about tutorials is that by step #2, I get so lost that I skip the next 3 steps and by step #6 I find something cool of my own. On the other hand, I thought it could be interesting to show how my process was in this peculiar work. As I said before, I do not apply this same process in any of my other works, it’s just what I came with for this particular illustration. For me, the most interesting is not the techniques themselves but the beauty of how the things develop during the process until they end up becoming something close to what I originally wanted to express.

chef

In this case, we wanted a welcoming figure of a chef, so we first thought of using the image of a Basque chef. I am half-Basque myself and I come from a family of Basque cooks. I love cooking and so does Naomi. That’s one of the reasons why we decided to use this theme for the web site: because we wanted to express our design work in relationship with something we love. So we decided to use this Basque cook archetype regarding how many Basque chefs are famous today. I tried to portrait the typical strong Basque man in a cartoonish way (see Fig. 1) and I have to say that many of my family members in Orduña they look pretty much this.

chef

We decided we wanted something softer and more welcoming than the strong and straight lines of the Basque features. Then, I worked in a new version of a French cook (See Figure 2), which turned into something too much of a cliché. This new cartoonish approach allowed me to bring something more fun and welcoming, based on round shapes merged into dynamic curves. This could work, but there was not very much from ourselves in this version, which we always want to avoid. I still wanted to portrait something closer to my personal illustration style, but I wanted a compromise between my art oriented works and something design oriented and commercial that could represent the spirit of our work. This way, I worked in a new sketch inspired in my own art illustration, which has always had a big influence from Naive European painters and other artists from the early 20th century such as Picasso, Amedeo Modigliani and Tamara de Lempicka.

chef

Finally, we decided to go for a mixture of a French and Basque character, which makes sense because that’s just what it is in the South of France. I first drew a preliminary sketch study of the geometrical shapes (See Figure 3), which I usually do in my artwork. The figure is basically based on two round shapes balanced towards opposite directions and connected by a curve axis that define the expression and movement of the character. In this case, I tried to look for a feeling of harmony in the body language and a gentle and warm feeling. That’s why I decided to draw the head slightly laying to the side.

chef

This skeleton gave life to the final sketch (See Figure 4) where the expression of the drawing was developed and I played with the curves in elements such as the mustache, the hat and the bow. The version displayed here includes a new proposal with the chef holding a plate with a bottle which wasn’t used.

Once the main sketch was ready, I went to draw it in vectorial work, keeping all of the different parts of the figure separated in layers and using different working colors just to make it easy to work with(See Figure 5).

chef

These colors would be later replaced by the real ones. Once the vectorial work is finished I usually like to export each layer to JPG image in the highest resolution as possible. No matter how small the work is, I always work in 300 px resolution because you never know what you may want to do with your work in the future. Also because this gives me the opportunity of working with more precision and in detail. As an artist who was taught to paint on canvas, I like to work with the image as big as possible on my screen. So I exported all of the elements separately and then put them in different layers in my painting program, which may be Corel Painter or Adobe Photoshop depending on the needs of the work.

chef

Despite that this may look like painting by numbers, is not at all because I have all the freedom in the world to work on each layer individually and the result of any of them may affect the rest of them. It’s also a funny way to have the elements in sort of collage manner so I can play with them with independence. As you may see in the next sample (See Figure 6), I started correcting the colors for each layer in order to find the chromatic base for the illustration. At this stage, the illustration started showing up, which for me is always the most exciting part of the process. In this case, I started working in the shadow effects for the different layers and then added new nuances of color to bring chromatic richness.

chef

In this particular case (See Figure 7) the result is a mixture between paper collage and volume pieces, which is just what I was trying to fulfill in the first place. Once this work (which is probably the longest part of the process) was done, I did a revision of all the parts to correct the color scheme and made the whole thing homogeneous. Then I worked with overall shades and highlighted the contrast of the different features to remark whatever I think it’s necessary, which you can tell by comparing this version with the final one displayed at the top of the article.

Now the work was finally ready to get merged, so… Kito!… I mean… Et voilà!… which is to say… Supper’s ready!

What more can I say?… oh, yes! Enjoy your meal!

We Are Flattered

by Intuitive Designs

Sunday, June 18th, 2006

We have recently been getting quite a bit of attention for our recently re-designed site, so we would like to say thank you to all of the kind people who have mentioned us on their sites including:

CSS Mania
CSS Remix
Web Creme
Design Meltdown
The Daily Slurp
CSS Drive
CSS Bloom
Web Design Archive
CSS Lab
Creative Public’s Designer of the Month for July 2006
Patrick Haney on Flickr

Thank you!

Site Redesign

by Intuitive Designs

Tuesday, June 6th, 2006

As many of you might have noticed, we have just finished the redesign of our site. We have tried to make it leaner, meaner, and more standards compliant and more beautiful visually. Koldo Barroso, one of the owners of the studio did the illustrations of the site and is currently available for illustration work. He can do just about any type of illustration you might imagine, so if you need something done, feel free to contact us!

We welcome and appreciate any feeback or suggestions you might have as well. Thank you!