Category: AD395 – Final Major Project

AD395: creative process and rationale

Development of statement of intent:

My statement of intent originally set out to investigate feminist messages and content in campaigns, products and publications, and to challenge the often called out insincerity of these. In my research leading up to my final major project I looked at the rise of feminist slogan t-shirts and other products, as well as campaigns aimed at feminist movements, for example H&M’s “Like a Lady” video, which was hailed as “the feminist advert we all need in our lives” for its inclusion and celebration of different presentations of femininity, despite it also making headlines that the brand pulled plus-size clothing from some of its stores. I wanted to set out to experiment with my skills and passion for graphic design and self-publishing, to fill a gap in the market of independent zines and feminist publications that could challenge these messages we are fed by big names in the fashion industry.

My research in the process of this project began by coming across an article in an older issue of music and culture magazine CRACK, titled “Progressive Publishing: Is This a Golden Era for Female-Focused Zines?” which inspired me with words from Angeli Bhose of Cuntry Living: “When companies take advantage of the growing interest around feminism in popular culture and try to sell it back to us, re-packaged, it is really frustrating.” The article highlighted how “feminism continues to become steadily commodified by brands seeking to target a millennial, socially-aware audience” and that “zine publishers risk being sucked into the slipstream of major companies” – this made me realise that it is an increasingly difficult task to create a feminist publication that can make waves in a movement that is being adopted by so many brands and publications already, and may risk losing its genuineness or originality.

Initial publication and trend research

I researched and analysed the content and tone of existing alternative and independent publications I already admire, for example Mushpit which comments on contemporary society an attitudes in art, fashion and culture and focuses on satirical features and adverts, as well as more focused feminist zines such as Sister and Polyester which are full of contributors’ submissions around specific themes, aimed at creating a safe space for readers to express themselves away from the world of mass-produced, mainstream publications and media. I wanted to fill a gap in the market by finding a middle-ground – was it possible to create an independent publication that allowed readers to input their views, words and visuals while commenting on the attitudes, politics and lifestyles brands so often buy into and try to sell back to us?

I started to think about lifestyles and attitudes that are popular at the moment and that I had observed both online and in the world around me. I decided to focus my research on the surging trend in “self-care”, which many brands have very recently been using to invent and promote products which claim to help us look after ourselves, or become a better “you” – when really “self-care” is not something that can be bought with an expensive yoga mat, diet guide or silky pyjamas. An article published on online platform Girlboss brought these issues to light; titled “Selling Self-Care: The Awkward Perils Of Going Mainstream”, it commented on the capitalist issues surrounding this trend and how important behaviours for our physical and mental health can lose their meaning or importance when marketed as a fashion statement, or something that only the privileged can access. I decided to focus the first issue of my publication around the word “comfort”, relating to this lifestyle trend, and put out a call for submissions online and around university asking for diverse content responding to this word in terms of fashion, art, food, mental health and personal thoughts.

The project as a personal journey

This was when the progress of FILLER began to change direction. The more research I carried out into this area, the more it became focused on food and eating habits, and how we are constantly bombarded with new products, diets, or even specific foods that we should be eating or how we should be eating. WGSN brought my attention to the rise of “intuitive eating” as the next rising food trend after so-called “clean eating”. While we are constantly scrolling through filtered photos on Instagram of perfectly arranged plates of avocado on toast, smoothies and raw salads, behind this there is a newer trend in eating what you want, how you want, when you want. Listening to your body, and enjoying what you eat. It may not always be “healthy” or perfectly photogenic, but life isn’t.

This topic became very personal to me as I have suffered from anorexia from the age of 14, and just before I began this project went through a relapse which severely damaged my health and nearly resulted in me having to leave university. I wanted this project to become part of my recovery, to help me along the way in my journey to rediscovering my love of food and life – and to create something not only meaningful and helpful to me, but also to others who might see what I am doing. Cook and food writer Ruby Tandoh’s recently released book Eat Up! comments on the importance of food in relation to our happiness, health (mental and emotional as well as physical) and how it forms part of who we are.

Creation and development

My first creative piece of work I wanted to include in the project was a still life shoot capturing people’s admitted comfort foods – I wanted to capture how the foods we really enjoy to eat, that lift our mood, make us feel safe and warm and comfortable, often are not the ones we post on social media or show off about. They are often less photogenic, perhaps messy or greasy or limited in colour (and typical nutrition), but they are still important in our lives. I collected answers via an online survey which confirmed my thoughts, and picked a selection of foods to photograph, which formed part of my first editorial for FILLER.

I had already started collecting other visual and textual submissions for the zine, which had also ended up being heavily food-related. This gave me the confidence to change the concept of FILLER to being solely food and lifestyle oriented – luckily the titled of FILLER was still relevant and I am very happy with the connotations the word has when placed in this context. I decided that the concept of FILLER was to “provoke conversation and thought around current trending topics, without taking itself too seriously”. Therefore this issue became focused entirely on comfort food.

I received a great number of submissions, some from friends and some from people I had never had contact with before, all showing their interest for this topic, which proved my thoughts around the passion people really do have for enjoyment of food (whether it is “clean” or not).

I didn’t want FILLER to lose its roots in fashion and trend investigation, however fashion editorials are not a strong point of mine. I have always preferred candid, simplistic photography, and so I decided to use this to create a (sort of) fashion editorial for the zine, using people’s comfort foods as a kind of prop, and actually quite a main focus, in the photos. My further knowledge and research into youth trends highlighted a trend in nightwear and lingerie, notably silky, pastel fabrics and loungewear – which coincidentally link to this rising trend in self care, looking after and loving yourself. I wanted to create a candid, intimate photo shoot, which looked at the clandestine act of comfort eating in bed, perhaps in glamorous lingerie or nightwear. The photos focused on the act of eating more than the fashion itself, combining feminine pastel colours with grotesque, messy foods such as cheeseburgers and pies (which I styled with ornate glass and silverware to parody how inexpensive and unglamorous they are often perceived to be).

Experimentation and content creation

Above all, I wanted FILLER to have the ability to network and form connections with other influencers challenging these trends and inspiring change. I contacted Eleanor Nadimi, founder of homewares brand One Nine Eight Five, who released a product range and campaign raising money for eating disorder charity Beat after a relative passed away after a fight with anorexia. I wanted FILLER to show the difference between insincere messages of positivity purely to sell products, and the genuine concern of people close to a cause. My interview with Eleanor was casual and turned into more of a chat about our shared values, aims and our mutual concern for eating disorder awareness – however it was a great example of a brand with personal and sentimental values and connection to her followers – which is everything I want my zine to be.

Before I lose track with the creative process of my project, I also wanted to use the development of this zine to experiment more in printing, design and production methods that I am passionate about or have always admired. I am interested in alternative printing methods and wanted to try letterpress, so visited London Centre for Book Arts for a letterpress class. This enabled me to gain experience in something I had never tried before, and formed typography in part of my zine. I also asked a fellow university student and friend Samuel Rockett to design a freebie poster that I could risograph print (I have used risograph previously in personal work and love the contemporary, bright colours and screenprinted look it creates). I made the decision quite early on to produce FILLER as a tabloid/newspaper style publication, to reflect its content commenting on trends and what is essentially “news” in the food/lifestyle industries.

Other content I created took a lighthearted approach to other elements of trends I have observed. For example there is a youth trend in astrology and spirituality, with more and more young adults taking notice of horoscopes – Instagram alone is filled with “memes” dissecting our signs and how that explains our behaviour and personality traits. A popular app called Co-Star gives users daily astrological updates, and also allows you to add your friends so that you can view their natal charts and read in-depth compatibility results. So I created a satirical horoscopes feature in the zine, which turned knowledge of each star sign into lighthearted guidance on lifestyle and food habits, for example suggesting that Scorpios should “stop comparing your foodie Instagram pics to everyone else’s”. The rise in “mindfulness” colouring books for adults’ mental health inspired me to create a “self-care must haves” colouring page, which used my personal illustration style to depict typical self-care products and behaviours for readers to colour in.

The lighthearted and fun approach I wanted this project to have was reflected in the graphic design – sometimes mismatching, hand-drawn and unpolished, I wanted it to in a way resemble the DIY punk zines I had previously researched, while providing a contemporary, digitalised take. I included hand-drawn renderings of classic newspaper-style fonts, e.g. old English headline styles, typewriter fonts and Times New Roman, along with brightly coloured imagery and collage-style graphics. Although I feel I could never be satisfied with the layout and design, I feel like FILLER is a work in progress and each issue will develop and change with the progression of my learning and understanding in the self-publishing industry.

Progression

Through creating an online presence for FILLER from the beginning of the project it helped me gain potential readers, contributors and collaborators and allowed me to network with other creatives and publishers. I was invited to London College of Communication’s event Voices in Publishing which allowed zine-makers to network and promote their work as well as attend talks with editors from other zines including Sister. I was also informed recently that my zine has been chosen to exhibit at Somerset House’s upcoming PROCESS! Festival in July, which is co-curated by another one of my favourite independent magazines, OOMK. I feel that this project has opened up so many new connections and paths for me that I hope will only continue to expand in the future. Creating this zine has not only been challenging in a creative sense – forcing me to get out of my comfort zone, experiment more and perfect work to a sellable standard – but also mentally, becoming part of my recovery journey from my eating disorder, helping me to put myself and my experiences out there and become a “changemaker” in a world of mass-produced media.

FILLER zine @ Somerset House

I found out today that FILLER has been chosen to exhibit at PROCESS! Festival, a festival at Somerset House – co-curated by another of my favourite independent magazines OOMK – in July, celebrating independent artists, collectives and publishers. This’ll be a brilliant opportunity to promote FILLER, make more creative and business connections and gain inspiration from others.

This’ll also teach me more about the curation, engagement and management of arts and publishing events, something I want to start increasing my involvement in after university, and hopefully host my own.

>>> Facebook event here <<<

https://www.somersethouse.org.uk/whats-on/process

 

launch event/promotion

Through being previously involved in events for Pop-Up Brighton, I was contacted regarding potential space hire for a zine launch event that I had enquired about. I wanted to keep any events local to Brighton and/or London as the majority of my contributors are based around there, as am I, and it keeps the personal, friendly feel of the zine. This is also why I wanted a small, independent and accessible venue to keep this approachable feel for Filler. Brighton has a great scene for pop-up, DIY arts and music events and so I wasn’t short of inspiration or venues/collaborators I could contact.

It was proposed that I could hold a week-long event, which I would base as an exhibition of prints from the zine project, as well as selling the first issue and promoting the project as an ongoing brand. I wanted to hold a ‘launch’ event on the first day of the space hire to encourage people to attend, much like other zines or independent magazines like Ladybeard and Polyester do.

This could involve: a gig featuring local bands, food tasting or a food-based installation, an interactive board or wall that guests can write/doodle/submit their ideas about Filler on, a zine or collage workshop.

FILLER: online promotion

instagram: @fillerzine

At the very beginning of my project development I created an Instagram for the publication, which became a mood board of inspiration, ideas, artists and my progress, creating a place to find collaborations, submissions, and improve reach and following. The development of my project’s concept, design and content is visible through the Instagram, as I used it to not only share inspiration and visual ideas I’d come across but also my own experimentation, and connecting with followers. This has proven to be a valuable platform for promotion as I received several enquiries via the Instagram account around submissions, event involvement and future opportunities. From my independent zine research at the beginning of this brief it is clear that many publications use Instagram to reach and connect with a young adult, creative audience and find collaborators and opportunities.

A post on @fillerzine’s Instagram announcing my interview with Eleanor Nadimi of One Nine Eight Five – promoting her brand and campaign as well as our involvement and support for EDAW.
FILLER Zine on Facebook

In order to create a ‘business’ Instagram account it must be linked to a Facebook page, therefore I created a Facebook page for FILLER in order to provide another social platform that potential readers can find out more from. Although I feel Facebook pages are not browsed as much as Instagram profiles, which are more about curated, aesthetic content, Facebook is still a valuable network to promote, allowing a broader range of content to be promoted and interacted with, for example creation and promotion of events (for potential launch events/parties in the future).

I wanted to keep the tone of FILLER’s online presence casual, friendly and personal rather than business-like, as it is after all a personal, independent project I am launching. Therefore I felt more comfortable addressing followers in a casual way as I would on my own social accounts, and sharing my own personal achievements, views and thoughts around the project – which also makes the publication/brand as a whole feel more approachable than other magazines.

Page for FILLER on hollyelizatemple.com

In addition to this, in order to promote the zine as a personal endeavour I created a page for FILLER on my portfolio website (I was originally going to create a separate website for the publication, but financially it made more sense to integrate it as part of my existing website, until the publication has grown in the future). This page features a description of what FILLER is all about, including quick links to its social media accounts – in the future it will feature a link to an online shop (on Bigcartel) to purchase the zine, as well as a gallery archive of past issues/work featured. I think this page on my portfolio works well as it promotes the zine as a separate, stand alone project from my other creative work, and drives traffic to my portfolio as well as FILLER’s other pages.

interactive/satirical magazine features

I researched into lighthearted and satirical magazine features to follow the fun, approachable tone I want FILLER to have. My main inspiration came from Bay Garnett’s Cheap Date magazine, which focuses on going against mainstream, mass-produced fashion and has a DIY zine feel. More recently, Mushpit magazine features satirical adverts and interactive elements such as quizzes and diagrams that comment on our contemporary society.

This made me want to take a lighthearted approach to other elements of trends I have observed. For example there is a youth trend in astrology and spirituality, with more and more young adults taking notice of horoscopes – Instagram alone is filled with “memes” dissecting our signs and how that explains our behaviour and personality traits. A popular app called Co-Star gives users daily astrological updates, and also allows you to add your friends so that you can view their natal charts and read in-depth compatibility results. So I created a satirical horoscopes feature in the zine, which turned knowledge of each star sign into lighthearted guidance on lifestyle and food habits, for example suggesting that Scorpios should “stop comparing your foodie Instagram pics to everyone else’s”.

The rise in “mindfulness” colouring books for adults’ mental health inspired me to create a “self-care must haves” colouring page, which used my personal illustration style to depict typical self-care products and behaviours for readers to colour in.

“room service”: fashion editorial

(pre-editing)







I didn’t want FILLER to lose its roots in fashion and trend investigation, however fashion editorials are not a strong point of mine. I have always preferred candid, simplistic photography, and so I decided to use this to create a (sort of) style editorial for the zine, using people’s comfort foods as a prop, and actually quite a main focus, in the photos. My further knowledge and research into youth trends highlighted a trend in nightwear and lingerie, notably silky, pastel fabrics and loungewear – which coincidentally link to this rising trend in self care, looking after and loving yourself.

I wanted to create a candid, intimate photo shoot, which looked at the clandestine act of comfort eating in bed, perhaps in glamorous lingerie or nightwear. The photos focused on the act of eating more than the fashion itself, combining feminine pastel colours with grotesque, messy foods such as cheeseburgers and fries (which I styled with ornate glass and silverware to parody how inexpensive and unglamorous they are often perceived to be).

 

 

development of concept: food & fashion

Ader Error

In my tutorial with Vanessa today we went through my progress so far in terms of collecting submissions for FILLER, as well as my own content that I have begun to think about. We discussed how I have an interest in food photography and the discourse around food and diet trends, and how this translates well into fashion communication as the relationship between fashion and food is rather tenuous. This led me to consider how FILLER could focus exclusively on food and fashion, as it is a theme that appears in a lot of my research, inspiration and ideas, and also makes the zine personal to my interests (which is after all what a zine is all about). I also stated how people seem to be excited to engage with content surrounding food, as I received a lot of responses in my comfort food survey. I have therefore decided to work with this naturally emerging theme of food and tailor my call for submissions to focus more on food-related pieces, which has led me to feel a lot more excited about the development of the project, as a truly unique publication based around my personal interests but catering for the individual, forward-thinking reader that is still interested in trends, art and fashion.

 

comfort food shoot

I conducted a survey online asking people (through social media platforms) to submit their ‘ultimate comfort food’ – some submitted simply a word or two, others a short description, and some a lengthy anecdote describing the nostalgia or pleasure created by consuming their favourite food. This formed the basis of a still life shoot depicting people’s comfort food. After researching and being aware of the ‘wellness’ and ‘clean-eating’ trend that is especially visible on social media, I find it intriguing how the foods people actually enjoy eating, that make them feel better when they are sick, sad, tired or just relaxing, are actually not the most aesthetically pleasing. I wanted to, visually, comment on how we are constantly Instagramming superfood-packed bowls of porridge, açai bowls, smoothies or fruit platters, because they are so typically ‘pretty’ and send out a message of health, purity and attractiveness to our followers, but really the foods we get real pleasure from are (to name a few submissions) toast, garlic bread, macaroni cheese, pizza, donuts and shortbread biscuits.

I wanted to select a few of these submissions and depict them against backdrops resembling bedcovers, to relate to the theme of comfort food and the intimate, clandestine act of bingeing on your favourite snacks in bed. I used silky, luxurious looking fabrics which when juxtaposed with the typically ‘unattractive’ food created a playful aesthetic, presenting cheap, everyday supermarket products as something glamorous.




defining the market and readership

My tutorial today with Vanessa Marr encouraged me to think more about defining a definite image of a reader for FILLER…who I want to buy the magazine, and who I don’t want to target. As I want the content and tone of FILLER to differ from mainstream fashion magazines I need to have a clear idea of the attitudes and personality of the readers I am trying to attract.

I have therefore created an audience profile to help me target my magazine to the kind of person I want it to appeal to. I created a description of a reader that has the interests, academic background, hobbies, attitudes and style of what I imagine a typical FILLER reader would. This will help as the identity and content of my zine develops to keep it relevant to the target audience.

We also discussed how I want FILLER to be a project I continue even after the deadline of FMP, and how I could seek business and financial support to make this a publication to be sold and distributed. I would like to, if possible, explore funding options, for example crowdfunding and support from the careers service – to help me think of this project as a first step into my future career and help me stay motivated when developing the brand and promotion.

 

 

CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS

My tutorial with Martha Harris yesterday encouraged me to think more about the desired aesthetics and design of my zine. As I am interested in exploring printing methods and book arts outside of my university studies we discussed print technique experimentations for example risograph and screen printing (or even creating that ‘look’ within the zine to resemble Xerox photocopied punk zines). Above is a call for submissions I posted across social media (Facebook, Instagram and Twitter) , which we also discussed printing as a flyer or poster and distributing in shops and venues that target the same artistic or DIY scene that I am trying to attract.

I want to progress now by starting to look at layout and design inspiration, as well as possible paper stocks and colour as this will definitely influence the design of my magazine, and the way content appears or is presented.