Sunday, May 3, 2009

1.Research
Part 1: Newborn Children
Chinese people put their family in a very important position as they regard it as a means to keep the family blood stream continuously running. And the running family blood stream maintains the life of the whole nation. That is why children production and breeding in China becomes a focus of all members of families. It is even accepted by them as an essential moral duty. There is a Chinese saying that of all who lack filial piety, the worst is who has no children.

The fact that Chinese people pay great attention to children production and breeding can be supported by many customary practices. Many traditional customs about preproduction of children are all based on the idea of children protection. When a wife is found to be pregnant, people will say she "has happiness," and all her family members will feel overjoyed about it. Throughout the whole period of pregnancy, both she and the fetus are well attended, so that the fetus is not hurt in any way and the new generation is born both physically and mentally healthy. To keep the fetus in a good condition, the going-to-be mother is offered sufficient nutritious foods and some traditional Chinese medicines believed to be helpful to the fetus.

When the baby is born, the mother is required to "zuoyuezi" or stay in bed for a month in order to recover from the fatigue. In this month, she is advised to stay at home and not to go outdoors. Cold, wind, dirty air, and tiredness are said to exert bad effect on her health and thus her later life.

A good name for a child is considered equally important. The Chinese think a name may somehow determine the future of the child. Therefore, all possible factors must be taken into account when they are naming their children.

Traditionally, two parts of a name are essential, the family name or last name and a character showing the generation order of the family. Another character in the first name is chosen as the namer pleases. The generation signing characters in the names are usually given by the forefathers, who chose them from a line of a poem or found their own and put them in the genealogy for their descendents to use. For this reason, it is possible to know the relationships between the family relatives by just looking at their names.

Another custom is to find the newborn baby's Eight Characters (in four pairs, indicating the year, month, day and hour of a person's birth, each pair consisting of one Heavenly Stem and one Earthly Branch, formerly used in fortune-telling) and the element in the Eight Characters. It is traditionally believed in China that the world is made up of five principal elements: metal, wood, water, fire, and earth. A person's name is to include an element that he lacks in his Eight Characters. If he lacks water, for example, then his name is supposed to contain a word like river, lake, tide, sea, stream, rain, or any word associating with water. If he lacks metal, then he is to be given a word like gold, silver, iron, or steel.

Some people even believe that the number of strokes of a name has a lot to do with the owner's fate. So when they name a child, the number of strokes of the name is taken into account.

Some parents prefer to use a character from an eminent person's name, hoping that their child inherits that person's nobility and greatness. Characters with noble and encouraging connotations are also among the first choices. Some parents inject their own wishes into their children's names. When they want to have a boy, they may name their girl Zhaodi meaning expecting a brother.

The first important event for the newly born baby is the one-month celebration. In Buddhist or Taoist families, on the morning of the baby's 30th day, sacrifices are offered to the gods so that the gods will protect the baby in his subsequent life. Ancestors are also virtually informed of the arrival of the new member in the family. According to the customs, relatives and friends receive gifts from the child's parents. Types of gifts vary from place to place, but eggs dyed red are usually a must both in town and the countryside. Red eggs are chosen as gifts probably because they are the symbol of changing process of life and their round shape is the symbol of harmonious and happy life. They are made red because red color is a sign of happiness in Chinese culture. Besides eggs, food like cakes, chickens and hams are often used as gifts. As people do in the Spring Festival, gifts given are always in even number.

During the celebration, relatives and friends of the family will also return some presents. The presents include those which the child may use, like foods, daily materials, gold or silver wares. But the commonest are some money wrapped in a piece of red paper. Grandparents usually give their grandchild a gold or silver ware to show their deep love for the child. In the evening, the child's parents give a rich feast at home or a restaurant to the guests at the celebration.

Part 2: Elderly People
Traditionally, Chinese people do not pay a lot of attention to birthdays until they are 60 years old. The 60th birthday is regarded as a very important point of life and therefore there is often a big celebration. After that, a birthday celebration is held every ten years, that is the 70th, the 80th, etc, until the person's death. Generally, the older the person is, the greater the celebration occasion is.

The Chinese traditional way to count the age is different from the Western way. In China, people take the first day of the Chinese New Year in lunar calendar as the starting point of a new age. No matter in which month a child is born, he is one year old, and one more year is added to his age as soon as he enters the New Year. So what may puzzle a Westerner is that a child is two years old when he is actually two days or two hours old. This is possible when the child is born on the last day or hour of the past year.

It is often the grownup sons and daughters who celebrate their elderly parents' birthdays to show their respect for them and express their thanks for what they have done for their children. According to the traditional customs, the parents are offered foods with happy symbolic implications. On the birthday morning the father or mother will eat a bowl of long "long-life noodles." In China long noodles symbolize a long life. Eggs are also among the best choices of food taken on the special occasion.

To make the occasion grand, other relatives and friends are invited to the celebration. In Chinese culture, 60 years makes a cycle of a life and 61 is regarded as the beginning of a new life cycle. When one is 60 years old, he is expected to have a big family filled with children and grandchildren. It is an age to be proud of. That's why elderly people start to celebrate their birthdays at 60.

Regardless of the scale of the celebration, peaches and noodles, which are both signs of long life, are required. But interestingly the peaches are not real. They are actually steamed wheaten food with sweet stuff inside. They are called peaches just because they are made in the shape of peaches. When the noodles are cooked, they should not be cut short, for the shortened noodles can have a bad implication. Everyone at the celebration eats the two foods to extend their best wishes to the long-life star.

The typical birthday presents are usually two or four of eggs, long noodles, artificial peaches, tonics, wine and money in red paper.


There are some pictures:
In my opinion, celebrate a birthday in my culture, family should get together, have a wonderful meal, red eggs, long noodles, artificial peaches and a birthday cake, and then sing birthday song, play games,it will be an exciting and memorible party.

2.Sketch

3.My Idea
I make this birthday card for eld ones. Red represent happiness and good luck, peach is an important thing to Chinese birthday.The word "shou" means living long.

4.Steps
Step 1: I use pen tool and mesh tool to draw a peach,then copy and paste.
Step 2: I use type tool to type a Chinese word "shou" and "Happy birthday".
Step 3: I use Ellipse tool to make an ellipse and colour it in yellow, then gether it with a little peach.
Step 4: I colour the background in red and make some decorations with Symble Sprayer tool and Ellipse tool.



Step 5: The wishes



Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Calendar

1. Idea
I decided to make a calendar for the Children's Day in China(June 1st).
Because I think fondly of my childhood. In Malaysia, Children's Day is celebrated on the last Saturday of October annually. In China, Children's Day is celebrated on June 1 and is formally known as "the June 1 International Children's Day". When the People's Republic of China was first established in 1949, the State Council (Cabinet) designated a half-day holiday for all primary schools on June 1. This was later made into a full day's break in 1956 with The Announcement by the State Council to make June 1 Children's Day a One-Day Holiday. Schools usually hold activities such as camping trips or free movies on Children's Day to allow students to have fun, and children of civil servants might also receive small gifts from the government.

Among those examples, I choose this one below:


And this is my sketch:
I made a little girl who looked like a tumbler doll on the left side, I hope my calendar looks childish because it is for the Children's Day. And I add some decorations when I make it , I think it looks better with these decorations.Then I made a little star behind the date 1st because it is for that day. I used green because green always represent life and peace. It means children can have wonderful life in a peaceful world.

2. Steps

step 1
I use Ellipse Tool to make the cute girl's head and body, color them in green
with Live Paint Bucket.

Step 2
I also use Ellipse Tool to make her lovely plaits

Step 3
I use Arc tool and Ellipse Tool to make her fringe and eyes

Step 4
I create some decorations with Polygon Tool and Star Tool to make it beautiful

Step 5
Last I use Type Tool to type the year , the month and the dates, to make it more beautiful, I change their character and size

3. Reference
This picture below is about
tumbler dolls which I refer to at the beginning

4. My final outcome
Oh, my final outcome~~!


Thursday, March 12, 2009

The logo!!











1.The logo I want to redesign and some information about the company
I want to redesign Nando's logo,this is its current logo.
And some information below:
Nando's Malaysia Director Mac Chung Lynn first discovered Nando's while eating in the London stores as an architecture student. Despite her qualification as an architect, she was so taken with the brand that she decided to put the world of architecture aside to introduce Nando's unique flame-grilled chicken to Malaysia. And in the month of September 1998, Nando's famous Cockerel landed on Malaysia’s shores, providing the lucky people of Bangsar with a fiery taste of Afro-Portuguese Flame Grilled Peri-Peri Chicken. Nando's hassince spread its wings creating more Nando's addictsas it openedrestaurants throughout the Klang Valley, Penang and Melaka.


2.My sketches

Sketch 1

Sketch 2


3.My thoughts

Finally,I decided to redesign the logo as sketch 2,I am Chinese,so I want to do it in "Chinese Style".My idea came from "Chinese New Year Paintings".Many Chinese like to stick them on walls or doors on Chinese new year.They think those paintings can make them lucky in new year.Here is an example:


I coloured the background in red,because in China,red means happiness and luck .I think the company hope their customers to be happy when they have meals in Nando's restauarants.

Then I decided to draw the cock like Chinese painting.Last,I wrote down the company's name and its web link in Chinese style.I want them to look like Chinese handwriting.

4.My final output

Here is my final output below: