Designing for Non-Designers: Tips, Tricks and Techniques

Kirsten and I recently took a day trip up to Chattanooga, TN, to present “Designing for Non-Designers: Tips, Tricks and Techniques” for the Lookout Chapter of the Public Relations Society of America. We were welcomed by a good dose of Tennessee summer heat and Southern hospitality (including giant pieces of chocolate and vanilla cake to accompany a delicious lunch!). We’d like to give a special thanks to Kristiina Braden for her warm welcome and introductions.
The audience was an engaged and diverse group. One member had a degree in graphic design and was transitioning into a PR position. A good amount of PR professionals had experience with Adobe InDesign, and they came from varied industries, including insurance, healthcare, and the nonprofit sector.
Kirsten started out asking what everyone was working on in order to get a better sense of how to tailor her presentation. Attendees had a wide array of projects ranging from print to web. Before going into overviews of technical information, Kirsten talked about getting past a problem we all experience: creative blocks. Before starting on projects, she recommends we give ourselves time to brainstorm and sketch. Brainstorming can be play in which we create multiple designs, collage and look for inspiration in sources from designs to photos to colors we like.

The first technical topic sparked quite a few questions from the audience: Designing for print vs. designing for Web. One audience member was curious which type is best for the Web. Kirsten listed Verdana, Arial, Tahoma, Times New Roman and Georgia among others as good choices. This question became a smooth transition to the next technical topic, typography.
After confessing her “love affair with typography,” Kirsten spent just the right amount of time on it, summarizing type anatomy, serifs vs. san-serifs, leading, text alignment, line length, ways type can communicate tones, and the audience’s favorite: the do’s and don’ts of decorative type. Kirsten listed four favorite fonts people tend to overuse: Rosewood, Comic Sans, Curlz, and Giddyup. She explained how these fonts actually take away from your message because they’ve become so cliché. Attendees laughed and agreed when she joked, “If someone tells you, ‘Make this friendly; use Comic Sans!’ say ‘No!’ and run away!”
At the end of the presentation, after Kirsten had just a second to taste the cake, attendees came up and thanked her for providing such practical information with appropriate detail and depth. One member found the presentation especially helpful to catch him up to speed after spending several years outside the field of PR. Other attendees said the presentation empowered them to juggle the multiple hats PR professionals now have to wear.
If you’re interested in learning more about the basics of design, click here to download a PDF of Kirsten’s complete presentation. We also welcome your comments below!






August 6th, 2010 at 2:28 pm
Wish I would have been there. Thanks for sharing Shannon. You ladies rocked it!