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zs [email protected] 972 955 3770 cargocollective.com/galacticatlas visual communications
Transcript

zs

[email protected] 955 3770

cargocollective.com/galacticatlas

visual communications

zs

zs

visual communicationscargocollective.com/galacticatlas972 955 [email protected]

Graphic designer, illustrator, art director, based in Dallas, TX. Senior in high school at St. Mark’s School of Texas. Looking to study design in college and pursue fruther as a career. Four years of publication experience. Proficient in Adobe InDesign, Illustrator and Photoshop. Creative Director at 10-time CSPA Gold Crown newspaper, The ReMarker; Creative Intern at Advanced Beauty Systems. Done work for publications, charities and freelance clients.

Experience

Creative InternAdvance Beauty SystemsJune ‘14 — August ‘14

Creative DirectorThe ReMarkerApril ‘14 — Present

Art DirectorThe MarqueAugust ‘13 — Present

Involved in production of advertising, signage, brand and package design for multiple product lines under the Advance Beauty name.

Responsibilities include oversight of Head Photographer and Graphics Director and their staffs in order to ensure quality visuals to accompany stories in St. Mark’s School of Texas’ award winning newspaper, The ReMarker. Creative Director is the driving force behind the annual redesign of the publication, and throughout the year is in charge of making sure each issue adheres to the appropriate design language. Additionally, Creative Director serves as one of the main staff resources on Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign and liases with the school Development Office to ensure the newspaper’s online presence.

Oversee the creation of cover and section break illustrations, along with custom illustrations for specific stories. Other responsibilities include the oversee of the graphic artists, staff education on Adobe programs such as InDesign, Illustrator and Photoshop, and creating editorial layout designs for the final publication.

Previous positions on staff: Graphics Director, April ‘13 — April ‘14; Staff Artist, August ‘11 — April ‘14

Creative DirectionGraphic DesignBrandingEditorial Design Package DesignWeb (HTML + CSS)Illustration

Adobe InDesignAdobe IllustratorAdobe Photoshop

Skills Selected Awards

Top in Texas: Student ArtApril 2014 University Interscholastic League ILPC Journalism Competition with works from The ReMarker

1st Place for Sports Page DesignApril 2014 University Interscholastic League ILPC Journalism Competition (4A Division 1) with works from The ReMarker

1st Place for Computer ArtApril 2014 University Interscholastic League ILPC Journalism Competition (4A Division 1) with works from The ReMarker

1st Place for Student ArtApril 2014 University Interscholastic League ILPC Journalism Competition (4A Division 1) with works from The ReMarker

Best Cartoon/Illustration Portfolio, Class BApril 2014As part of the Dallas Morning News 23nd Annual Journalism Day & Competition with work from The ReMarkerGold Circle for Art/Illustration: Portfolio of WorkSeptember 20131st Place from CSPA using assorted works from The ReMarker

zs

illustration

Identity illustration for the March ‘14 issue of The ReMarker. Known as “The Money Issue,” an illustrated headline was made for the cover, based on Guilloche engraving techniques found on banknotes. A smaller, colored in version was made for inside pages that denotes stories that go along with the money issue theme.

The Money IssueThe ReMarker

Cover headline

Inside badge

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editorial design

As part of The ReMarker’s sports section, the back page of each issue features quicker, lighter read to pull people in. Part of the back page is the High Performance Athlete feature, resulting in an interesting “L” shaped space left for the main story. For the November paper, the back page included a feature of the types of fans at our football games. The quarter-circle design allowed for not only filling up the challenging “L” space, but also provided a pattern to place the photos. Recepient of a 2014 Honorable Mention for Design from the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards.

The FanpageThe ReMarker

zs

illustration

Commemorating the 50th anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s death in Dallas, a special magazine addendum accompanied the November issue of The ReMarker newspaper. Several illustrations, inspired by one-line scribble drawings, were included in the magazine. For the cover, a red line drawing of Kennedy’s car on the road with the Old Red Courthouse and book depository in the background. Illustration starts on cover and continues on to the back side. The inside of the cover features a scribble drawing of Kennedy. The single-line drawing style is carried through the magazine with illustrations of selected key buildings.

Three Days in DallasThe ReMarker

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Cover

A MAN NAMED LEE

Story by Ryan O’Meara, issues editor, Charlie Golden, senior content editor, and Aidan Dewar, managing editor | photos used with permission, City of Irving Archives | graphic by Zuyva Sevilla, graphics director.

Does he have a gun here? the agent asked stiffly.No, Ruth Paine replied. Are you sure? the agent pressed her.Ruth turned to Marina, the frightened Russian woman who lived with her in her modest

Irving home, and translated the agent’s question. Marina looked back at Ruth and the agent and softly said, Yes. She led them to the garage and pointed to a blanket roll on the floor where she thought

the gun was. The agent picked the blanket up. It fell limp on his arm. The gun had been removed. “That was the moment I realized it could have been Lee who fired the shots that killed

the President,” Ruth said. Ruth Paine, a former summer school Russian teacher at St. Mark’s, never knew that her

interest in Russian would lead to this moment.Lee Harvey Oswald had not yet become one of the most reviled figures in American

history. He was just a man who visited her house on weekends to see his wife, Marina. To Ruth, he was Lee. continued, next page

DRuth Paine, mother of two children, a son Chris and a daughter, Lynn, watches her daughter open Christmas presents and plays in the park with her two children in these photos taken around 1963.

6 The ReMarkerNov. 1, 2013

from the right wing. The conspiracy business still goes on.”

Some people cheered when they heard the news of Kennedy’s death.

“You’d hear things like, when it was announced at the Dealey school, the word was that when it was announced the children cheered,” Whatley said.

•••Former master teacher Tom Adams was teaching classes on medieval and modern history when Kennedy was shot.

“It was a pretty normal Friday,” Adams said. “I remember during the week, there had been a tremendous hoopla about Kennedy coming to town. I think several people from St. Mark’s had gone down there to see Kennedy’s motor car. There was a lot of talk about all the precautions they were taking for a possible assassination attempt.”

Adams was walking back to his classroom from playing a lunchtime game of basketball when he heard the news.

“I got to the door of one of the old Lower School buildings and someone told me Kennedy had been shot,” Adams said. “My first reaction, I was not surprised because of all the talk they had had about the precautions. My second reaction was ‘Oh my God.’ Just wow.”

Despite the electrifying chain of events that followed the shooting, life on campus continued to move on. The community quickly learned to adjust to a world without JFK.

“There was definitely shock,” Ad-

ams said, “but I didn’t feel for the most part a tremendous love for Kennedy among the student body. I didn’t think the students thought the world was coming to an end or anything.”

•••Bill Clarkson ’66, president of the Westminster Schools in Atlanta, knew the President was coming to town. Although he was aware of the visit, he was not focused on the details of Kennedy’s trip.

“It was probably mid to late morning, and we all filed into Spanish class, and it was just a normal day, but he [the teacher] didn’t show up for class,” Clarkson said. “We sat there for ten or 15 minutes, and no one knew quite what to do, so we thought some-thing must have happened to him.”

Clarkson and his classmates exit-ed the classroom and into the hallway, where they were immediately flooded with the news that the president had just been shot.

“That just riveted everybody, so we, I think went over to the media center, and prime time and news program tele-vision or anything that was broadcasting, but it just totally disrupted the day, and of course ev-eryone was in stunned shock,” Clarkson said.

After hearing the many television reports, Clarkson’s initial emo-tional response was one of embarrassment.

“It was obviously very embarrassing for us, but after we learned that, and heard some of those comments and were riveted to the news, the rest of the day, and days shortly thereafter were a complete blur to me,” Clarkson said.

10 The ReMarkerNov. 1, 2013

CHANGING PLACES The city of Dallas will forever bear the shame of the assassination, but some places are more memorable than others. The place where Oswald shot from (top), the spot where JFK was hit (middle) and Oswald’s rooming house (bottom) were key spots on that fateful day.

Bill Clarkson ’66

Tom Adams

Dallas has struggled with how to appropriately commemorate the 50th anniversary of JFK’s assassination. Mayor Mike Rawlings gives his observations on how the city has changed.

The man who is leading the city’s commemoration efforts wasn’t in Dallas in 1963. He’s

not even a native Texan. He was a nine year-old elementary school student at Corinth Grade School in Leewood, KS on that fateful day Kennedy was killed.

Mayor Mike Rawlings, along with a steering committee of commu-nity leaders, is heading the commem-oration effort 50 years later as Dallas seeks to find an appropriate way to reflect on that day in 1963.

As Rawlings and others look back, they agree that such a major ca-tastrophe having taken place in Dal-las shook the city such that it would be years before it fully recovered.

“For a period of time, it kicked us in the gut as a city in a major way,” Rawlings said. “It helped us rethink who we are and how we were going to approach that.”

In 1963, Dallas was a relatively young city, having only been founded 122 years before the assassination.

For Rawlings, Dallas’s youth when compared to cities like Boston or Beijing is notable.

“It’s big things that make an image for a city,” Rawlings said. “It’s an event like this. It’s J.R. [from the television show, Dallas], it’s winning a Super Bowl, it’s these big media events, which is not fair for a city, you know, the T.V. show Dallas or something, but it is, that’s the way life is, so we have to continue to think big at the same time when we do the basic things for the city.”

Conspiracy theories about Ken-nedy’s murder still abound. Although Rawlings is personally “agnostic” about the numerous theories, he believes Kennedy’s death has become

“a great who-dun-it story in the 20th century.”

“The question,” according to Rawlings, “is ‘So what?’ I know what we need to do as a city and a country and whatever happened then is not going to impact me that much now, 50 years ago.”

Robbie Briggs ’71, now a Dallas real estate broker, remembers what it was like to be from Dallas during the era when the city was most saddled with the shame Kennedy’s death.

On a trip to Europe that sum-mer, Briggs’s father asked for a nice table at a restaurant in London’s Savoy hotel. The waiter knew he was from Dallas. When he reached into his coat pocket to get money to pay for a better table, the waiter thought he was reaching for a gun.

“That was the mindset that people in Dallas were these violent gun-carrying slingers that would kill the President of the United States who happened to be an individual that was loved literally worldwide,” he said. “It was a huge spot on us for years.”

Briggs still feels nervous when-ever a president visits Dallas.

“Every time today a president comes to town, I get nervous and I spend time praying for him,” Briggs said. “Just get him out of here. Make sure that he’s well taken care of and get him out of here. It makes me ner-vous every time we have presidents come visit anymore.”

It’s impossible to quantify how much Dallas has recovered since 1963. But many agree that Dallas changed sharply in the wake of the assassination.

Congressman Bruce Alger, a conservative Republican incumbent,

was defeated in a 1964 re-election bid by Democratic former Mayor Earle Cabell.

Although Oswald, a registered Communist, shot Kennedy, the city as a whole responded by shifting away from its far-right political beliefs.

Greg Nobles ’66, director of the honors program and a history professor at Georgia Tech, believes that Dallas’s recovery was paralleled in part by the success of the Dallas Cowboys. By the 1970s, Dallas had changed from the city of hate to the city where “America’s Team” played.

“I think that, by the early 1970’s, the success of the Cowboys had really created a different kind of image for Dallas,” he said. “So, that’s a kind of quick and dirty and fairly superficial analysis of Dallas, but I think it’s worth thinking about.”

Although transformed, Dallas can never truly escape the legacy that Kenendy’s death

left. Robert Decherd ’69, retired CEO of Belo Corporation, the parent company of The Dallas Morning News, believes in the importance of commemorating a sad but historical-ly important event.

“What’s being done to com-memorate the 50th anniversary is important,” Decherd said. “It’s also important that people in the city and leaders of the city are acknowledging that this is a part of who we are. We need to respect other people’s views. It’s history, and we need to build upon good will for our city. For our city, our state and our country it’s im-portant. It took a long time for Dallas to get there, and I’m glad we have.”

Former Headmaster Ted What-ley had a unique perspective on the

events. His wife at the time was from New England, a vastly different place than Dallas in 1963.

“My wife at the time had New England relatives, who were all an-ti-Kennedy I might add, and basically right wing Republicans, but they just considered people from Dallas being a bunch of savages,” he said. “Dallas has gotten beyond all that crap.”

Even now, 50 years later, the assassination has left an indelible mark on those who were alive at the time. Mike Levy ’64, founder of Texas Monthly magazine, remembers the day vividly.

“It was a long time ago,” he said. “And yet, for many of us, no different than 9/11, no different than Katrina. It seems like it happened yesterday.”

The plan for an official com-memoration event includes a ceremony to be held downtown Nov. 22. Before the ceremony, Rawlings is meeting with the committee for a brunch.

Rawlings is focused on the safety of those gathered in order to prevent another Nov. 22 disaster in Dallas.

“Safety first, and making sure we respect and honor the life of Presi-dent Kennedy,” he said.

Ultimately, the mayor believes that while the assassination will always be inextricably tied to Dallas, the city can also be remembered for how it recovered from such a horrific event.

“What Dallas did, it wrestled with a demon in the assassination,” Rawlings said. “Hopefully it’s come out because of that and it’s grown faster and better and dealt with some of the tough issues we face. The key is not how you fall. The key is how you get up.”

14-15 The ReMarker

A changed cityStory by Ryan O’Meara, issues editor Photo by Andrew Gatherer, head photographer

Nov. 1, 2013

Inside illustrations

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illustration

Cover illustration for the April Senior Section of the 2014 Remarker. Theme based of the Dr. Seuss Oh, the places you’ll go!. Illustrations took inspiration from Geisel’s iconic style and used members from the class of 2014 as subjects.

Oh, the places they’ll go!The ReMarker

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zs

editorial design

A hexagon design is used here to showcase a squash player. About half of the pictures were studio shots, while the rest were action shots on court. While the hexagon created a unique layout, it caused certain photos to have an awkward crop. To fix this, partial cutouts were matched with the in-frame photo, creating a pop-out effect and adding a dynamic touch to the page. No High Performance Athlete this month, so more space was allotted to the main feature, allowing for an extra infographic on the lower part of the page. Recepient of an 2014 Honorable Mention for Design from the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards.

Cross CourtThe ReMarker

zs

illustration

For a cover story on the 50th anniversary of student racial integration at St. Mark’s. Using oil paints and black ink, a flag was drawn up, representing the multitude of skin colors that live across America and attend the school. In place of stars, a quote from MLK representing the achievement was written using a brush pen. This brush pen lettering was continued in the drop cap of the story.

50 years later, a dream revisited

The ReMarker

Cover dropcap

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illustration

Illustration for St. Mark’s Student Council’s Gift Drive 2013. Used on button pins sold to promote the drive and encourage students to bring gifts. Money from pin sales was used to purchase more gifts, which were then donated to several charities in the Dallas area in time for Christmas.

Gift Drive 2013SM Student Council

ST.MARK’SGIFTDRIVE

2013

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editorial design

Back page design for February ‘14 issue of The ReMarker. For a feature about the swimming team and their record breaking members, photos were taken both above water with a Canon 5D Mark II and underwater with a GoPro camera. Due to the inconsistent aspect ratio of the pictures, a grid system was used to hide the edge of each photo and provide a seamless transition for all the images.

Hearts of ChampionsThe ReMarker

PAGE 24

RTHE REMARKER

THE BACK SPORTS PAGE

THE REMARKER | FRIDAY FEB 7, 2014

St. Mark’s School of Texas10600 Preston RoadDallas, Texas, 75230

HEARTS OF CHAMPIONS story by Zuyva Sevilla, graphics director and Philip Smart, staff writer, additional reporting by Bradford Beck, staff writer | photos by Zuyva Sevilla, graphics director, Matthew Conley, sports editor, Alden James, staff photographer and Sam Khoshbin, creative director

hearts ofCHAMPIONS

As varsity swimmers approach SPC, they hold their heads high — confident of the skills they’ve amassed. Skills obtained from weeks of training, competition and pure determination.

These swimmers have a reputation to uphold. But it’s not all about the title.

For the swimmers, the season has never looked better and they can walk into the championship confident enough to take on their rivals, all due to the team’s dedication.

“It is truly an amazing team,” head swimming coach Mihai Oprea said, “I have been here for 18 years and have coached a lot of teams but truly this team as a whole, from the first guy to the 48th guy— be-cause we have 48 guys—they are the hardest workers, they are the most self-disciplined, self-motivated.”

Among the frontrunners is sophomore Eric Li, who not only swam anchor on a 200-meter relay, breaking the school record with sophomore Kevin Wu, senior captain Jack Pigott and sophomore Kevin Kim, but also broke the individual 100-meter breaststroke record.

“At the moment,” Li said, “we weren’t exactly sure [we broke it] because during the swim I wasn’t aware of breaking the record. After we touched the wall, I realized that we broke the record and we were excited.”

For Wu, superb leadership is to credit for superb perfor-mance.

“The team is better than it was last year,” Wu said. “We have great captains, and every-one is getting involved.”

There is no resentment or jealousy among the ranks.

“It’s great, it’s great,” Oprea said. “Our team is probably one of the few teams that freshmen

and sophomores are pretty much equal with seniors and that is encouraged and sup-ported. It’s a pretty friendly team and the guys really work together very well and support each other.”

Oprea is encouraged by the number of underclassmen on the squad.

“As a coach, it’s great to see that we have ten sophomores on record-breaking teams,” he said. “So that’s great for them and that’s great for the team, but everyone’s really happy about it and supportive. There’s no like ‘how come it’s not the seniors.’ There is nothing like that.”

Even with all young talent, the veteran players are still a strong force on the team.

“I think the older guys are really happy that the team can do so well,” Li said, “so, even though some of the younger guys are really fast, I think for the team as a whole it’s better. The older guys aren’t slow, they’re fast too. They contribute to the team just as much as we [underclassmen] do.”

For Oprea, the season is no longer about winning a title, but about the connections made within teammates and the ded-ication that his swimmers have put into the team.

“For a coach,” said Oprea, “you can’t dream to have any-thing more than that. I think they are just an amazing team, an amazing group of guys and it doesn’t matter what were going to get at SPC. Win or not, I think these guys are awesome. Just a pleasure to have them.”

1 2

4

3

RECORD BREAKERS Swimmers sophomore Kevin Wu (1), sophomore Phillip Montgomery (2, 5), junior Cyrus Ganji (6), senior Phillip Osborn (3) and senior captains Ben Wilson (4) and Jack Mallick (7) work on their swim techniques at practic-es run by head coach Mihai Oprea and assistant coaches Dirk Ebel and Gica Deac. Senior captain Jack Pigott (8) and junior Vignesh Babu (9) compete in their respective events at the Ralph B. Rogers Natatorium.

5

7

WHITEOUT Dressed to the neck in white, Lions’ fans cheer out over the basketball court as the varsity players take on the Episcopal School of Dallas Eagles Jan. 31. The Lions built a 12-point halftime lead and held on to beat the Eagles 66-64.

Lion pride

8

9

Breaking the surfaceSo far, the swimmers have broken two records, and with

the team determined, more records might be on the horizon.

5

6

Event Time Swimmers Last record200 Free

Relay

100 Breast

89.02seconds

TIM

O’M

EAR

A P

HO

TO

Jack PigottKevin WuKevin Kim

Eric Li

90.87seconds

1992

59.02 seconds

59.50 seconds

1987Eric Li

HEAD COACH MIHAI OPREAI think they are just an amazing team, an

amazing group of guys and it doesn’t matter what we’re going to get at SPC. Win or not, I think

these guys are awesome.

SOPHOMORE KEVIN WUI just want to help out the team. That means

being there to improve the relay, but also being there to help the newer guys swim, to help

them be more confident and learn the tricks of swimming. Just helping the team in general to

improve is what I want to accomplish.

I just want to finish it for my team [as anchor],

bring it home and ensure a win.

SOPHOMORE ERIC LI

PAGE 24

RTHE REMARKER

THE BACK SPORTS PAGE

THE REMARKER | FRIDAY FEB 7, 2014

St. Mark’s School of Texas10600 Preston RoadDallas, Texas, 75230

HEARTS OF CHAMPIONS story by Zuyva Sevilla, graphics director and Philip Smart, staff writer, additional reporting by Bradford Beck, staff writer | photos by Zuyva Sevilla, graphics director, Matthew Conley, sports editor, Alden James, staff photographer and Sam Khoshbin, creative director

hearts ofCHAMPIONS

As varsity swimmers approach SPC, they hold their heads high — confident of the skills they’ve amassed. Skills obtained from weeks of training, competition and pure determination.

These swimmers have a reputation to uphold. But it’s not all about the title.

For the swimmers, the season has never looked better and they can walk into the championship confident enough to take on their rivals, all due to the team’s dedication.

“It is truly an amazing team,” head swimming coach Mihai Oprea said, “I have been here for 18 years and have coached a lot of teams but truly this team as a whole, from the first guy to the 48th guy— be-cause we have 48 guys—they are the hardest workers, they are the most self-disciplined, self-motivated.”

Among the frontrunners is sophomore Eric Li, who not only swam anchor on a 200-meter relay, breaking the school record with sophomore Kevin Wu, senior captain Jack Pigott and sophomore Kevin Kim, but also broke the individual 100-meter breaststroke record.

“At the moment,” Li said, “we weren’t exactly sure [we broke it] because during the swim I wasn’t aware of breaking the record. After we touched the wall, I realized that we broke the record and we were excited.”

For Wu, superb leadership is to credit for superb perfor-mance.

“The team is better than it was last year,” Wu said. “We have great captains, and every-one is getting involved.”

There is no resentment or jealousy among the ranks.

“It’s great, it’s great,” Oprea said. “Our team is probably one of the few teams that freshmen

and sophomores are pretty much equal with seniors and that is encouraged and sup-ported. It’s a pretty friendly team and the guys really work together very well and support each other.”

Oprea is encouraged by the number of underclassmen on the squad.

“As a coach, it’s great to see that we have ten sophomores on record-breaking teams,” he said. “So that’s great for them and that’s great for the team, but everyone’s really happy about it and supportive. There’s no like ‘how come it’s not the seniors.’ There is nothing like that.”

Even with all young talent, the veteran players are still a strong force on the team.

“I think the older guys are really happy that the team can do so well,” Li said, “so, even though some of the younger guys are really fast, I think for the team as a whole it’s better. The older guys aren’t slow, they’re fast too. They contribute to the team just as much as we [underclassmen] do.”

For Oprea, the season is no longer about winning a title, but about the connections made within teammates and the ded-ication that his swimmers have put into the team.

“For a coach,” said Oprea, “you can’t dream to have any-thing more than that. I think they are just an amazing team, an amazing group of guys and it doesn’t matter what were going to get at SPC. Win or not, I think these guys are awesome. Just a pleasure to have them.”

1 2

4

3

RECORD BREAKERS Swimmers sophomore Kevin Wu (1), sophomore Phillip Montgomery (2, 5), junior Cyrus Ganji (6), senior Phillip Osborn (3) and senior captains Ben Wilson (4) and Jack Mallick (7) work on their swim techniques at practic-es run by head coach Mihai Oprea and assistant coaches Dirk Ebel and Gica Deac. Senior captain Jack Pigott (8) and junior Vignesh Babu (9) compete in their respective events at the Ralph B. Rogers Natatorium.

5

7

WHITEOUT Dressed to the neck in white, Lions’ fans cheer out over the basketball court as the varsity players take on the Episcopal School of Dallas Eagles Jan. 31. The Lions built a 12-point halftime lead and held on to beat the Eagles 66-64.

Lion pride

8

9

Breaking the surfaceSo far, the swimmers have broken two records, and with

the team determined, more records might be on the horizon.

5

6

Event Time Swimmers Last record200 Free

Relay

100 Breast

89.02seconds

TIM

O’M

EAR

A P

HO

TO

Jack PigottKevin WuKevin Kim

Eric Li

90.87seconds

1992

59.02 seconds

59.50 seconds

1987Eric Li

HEAD COACH MIHAI OPREAI think they are just an amazing team, an

amazing group of guys and it doesn’t matter what we’re going to get at SPC. Win or not, I think

these guys are awesome.

SOPHOMORE KEVIN WUI just want to help out the team. That means

being there to improve the relay, but also being there to help the newer guys swim, to help

them be more confident and learn the tricks of swimming. Just helping the team in general to

improve is what I want to accomplish.

I just want to finish it for my team [as anchor],

bring it home and ensure a win.

SOPHOMORE ERIC LI

zs

editorial design

A pathway poll on spring fashion where all outfits could be bought for the less than $100. Printed on March ‘14, as part of the special Money ReMarker issue.

Let’s Talk FashionThe ReMarker LIFE

THE REMARKER | FRIDAY, MARCH 7, 2014 Page 15

The city is your

playground

You’re feeling

adventurous

LET’STALK

Keep it classy, Casanova. Dress to kill—one splash of cologne won’t kill you

and have some fun.fashionWakeboard or just relax

on the boat. A day on the lake might be just what you need.

Who’s coming?

Would you rather...

The bros

That special someone

Do you want to

get active?

During the week we may be restricted to what we can wear, but once the weekend rolls around, it’s up to you, only you, to decide the style of the apparel. And to show that the chains of money can’t hold down your taste, we went out and found six outfits, each for less than $100.

No

Yes

By land or by sea?

What’s your kind of date?

Do you want to...

See some indie band

you’ve never hear of

By the book

make new friends

play ping-pong

Land

Call me Ishmael

I am... hungry

in need of Vitamin D

Embrace your inner hipster. Go to an outdoor concert or

see a modern art exhibit. Look at it enough and it

makes sense!

Stay comfy as you scour the area for a

hole-in-the-wall diner or sit back and play some video games.

Go out and about, see what Dallas has

to offer

Take the ol’ ball and chain out to see a dinner and a movie.

You don’t have to impress her, but you did it

anyway.

Breathe in that fresh pine scent. Head over to Mineral Wells Park or the trails in Grapevine for an

invigorating hike.

LET’S TALK FASHION story by Sam Khoshbin, cre-ative director and Zuyva Sevilla, graphics director | photos by Sam Khoshbin, graphics by Zuyva Sevilla

The hipsterTop: Club Room $21.99 Macy’sBottom: Levi’s $29.99 Macy’sBelt: $2.33 St. Vincent dePaul ThriftShoes: Stacy Adams $35.00 Macy’s

Total: $84.31

Road tripTop: Club Room $12.25 Macy’sBottom: Izod $9.99 Macy’sBelt: $2.33 St. Vincent dePaul ThriftShoes: Sperry $38.00 Macy’s

Total: $62.57

Date nightTop: Izod $29.99 Macy’sBottom: Tommy Hilfiger $29.99 Macy’sBelt: $2.33 St. Vincent de Paul ThriftShoes: H&M $34.95 H&M

Total: $97.26

Ladies manTop: Tasso Elba $29.98 Macy’sBottom: H&M $19.95 H&MBelt: H&M $12.95 H&MShoes: Merona $34.95 Target

Total: $95.87

The outdoors-man

Top: American Rag $10.99+$6.99 Macy’s

Bottom: H&M L.O.G.G. $29.99 Macy’s

Belt: $2.33 St. Vincent de Paul Thrift

Shoes: Coleman $12.86 St. Vincent de Paul Thrift

Total: $63.12

The sailorTop: American Rag $9.99 Macy’sBottom: Amer-ican Eagle $7.02 Macy’sBelt: $2.33 St. Vincent de Paul ThriftShoes: Mero-na $24.99 Target

Total: $44.33

Go on a more

traditional date

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branding

Branding and t-shirt designs done for McDonald’s Week, a week long charity event, organized by the junior class of St. Mark’s School of Texas. running with a medival theme for 2013, McDonald’s Week ran in the middle of November and helped raise money over $10,000 for the Austin Street Homeless Shelter in downtown Dallas. Money was raised by donations from people and participating buisinesses in the area, raffle ticket sales and t-shirt sales. Main logo created for overall branding and front of t-shirt, and extra illustration was created for the back of the shirts.

McIeval TimesMcDonald’s Week 2013

Back shirt de-sign

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illustration

Illustrations for the High Perfomance Athlete feature in The Remarker.

High Performance AthleteThe ReMarker

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illustration

Graphics done for op-ed editorials in The ReMarker

Editorial GraphicsThe ReMarker

Editorial: Words define us

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Editorial: Playing the right cards (financially)

Editorial: New Science building suggestions

Editorial: Planetarium possibilities

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branding

Branding and t-shirt for the St. Mark’s 2013 Homecoming dance. Going on the “Emerald City,” an outline of the city skyline accompanies the Archer Pro typography.

St. Mark’s HomecomingSM Student Council

Shirtfrontgraphic

Shirtmockup

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illustration

Cover illustration for story on overbearing parents and excessive protection.

Protection ProblemsThe ReMarker

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illustration

Oil paint illustration of Arnie Holtberg, the most recent St. Mark’s School of Texas headmaster to retire.

ArnieThe ReMarker

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poster design

Poster for an “SXSW”-like St. Mark’s coffeehouse event.

SXSMSM Fine Arts Board

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illustration

Illustrations done for a special section of The ReMarker on depression. Typography is based on a word cloud graphics and uses quotes from interviews done for the story. Inside illustration features student from story and continues the handwritten type motif. Cover illustration is recepient of the 2013 Gold Circle for Computer Generated Art/Illustration from the Columbia Scholastic Press Association and a 2014 Silver Key for Digital Art from the Scholastic Art & Writing Awards. Overall special section package received the Class B Best Series awards from The Dallas Morning News 22nd Annual High School Journsalism Day & Competition.

Into the Eye of the StormThe ReMarker

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poster design

Posters promoting a St. Mark’s Coffeehouse event, a talent-show like event where students gather to see their classmates perfom music, literature and other acts. Particular theme for this event was Alaskan Beach Party. Photo manipulations done with Photoshop using stock images and studio photographs.

Alaskan Beach PartySM Fine Arts Board

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illustration

Illustrations for annual St. Mark’s Superfan shirts, shirts made to be worn to the annual basketball versus the biggest rival, the Episcopal School of Dallas. Theme was “King of the Jungle” with type on the front and a lion illustration on the back. Two color illustration with pattern fills to give the illustration more depth and shading.

Superfan shirts ‘14SM Student Council

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[email protected] 955 3770

cargocollective.com/galacticatlas

visual communications


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