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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
30 pages in length. There have been myriad technological advances throughout the past one hundred years. Indeed, the twentieth century turned out to be the springboard for the
unprecedented advancement in the graphic design industry, effectively availing entirely new and divergent concepts with which designers can create. From meager beginnings,
the graphic design industry has progressed into a much utilized and highly respected enterprise. The writer
discusses various changes and occurrence influential to the 20th century graphic design industry, including the transition from 2D to 3D; the incorporation of feng shui; and the issues of gender inequality. Bibliography lists 18 sources.
Page Count:
30 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCgrf20.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
industry, effectively availing entirely new and divergent concepts with which designers can create. From meager beginnings, the graphic design industry has progressed into a much utilized and highly respected
enterprise. I. TRANSFORMATION FROM LIFEFORM TO COMPUTER Two- and three-dimensional design has much to do with the mathematical aspect of its presence;
indeed, without understanding the basics of shape, one cannot fully appreciate how two-dimensional design can transform into a three-dimensional entity. A conic section is the two-dimensional figure that results
when a plane insects a cone at various angles. Take one of these figures and revolve it, and you have a three-dimensional surface of revolution that matches the shape
of the optical component. The surfaces of optical components are often described as Spherical, Paraboloidial, etc. These surfaces are the surfaces of revolution of various conic sections.
It was the Greeks who first studied conic sections as the curves of intersection of a plane with a cone. There are three main types of curves that are
possible. These are the ellipses, which is the set of all points in a plane having the property that the sum of their distances from two fixed points (the
foci) is constant. The parabola is a set of points in a plane that are equal distances from a given line (the directrix) and a given point called the
focus. The hyperbola can be described as the set of all points in a plane having the property that the absolute value of the difference between their distances from
two fixed points, called the foci, is constant (Means, 1999). Steve Aubrey is intimately familiar with these mathematical equations, inasmuch as he has readily applies them to his three-dimensional artwork.
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