Monday, February 25, 2013

Motion graphics meets alcohol and substance misuse

How much do you know about alcohol and substance misuse and it's affect on society? Maybe it's one of those "out of sight, out of mind" things for you. It certainly was for me until I was given an opportunity to create a video that explains to health care professionals why they should care and what they can do about alcohol and substance misuse in their patients. Before you click away from this thinking "I'm not a health care professional, that's not for me," let me just tell you that it impacts you... even if not directly.

Someday, I'd like to see this become a PSA, but while I'm dreaming that vision away, here's the video I created that is now the first part of a training series:

ADEPT: an introduction from Academic Support Center on Vimeo.
An introduction to why health care providers should care about alcohol and substance misuse in their practice. The ADEPT training teaches health care providers what they can do about alcohol and substance misuse. MU-ADEPT (Alcohol and Drug Education for Prevention and Treatment) is funded by a grant from SAMHSA and utilizes SBIRT (Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment).

This is a perfect example of the kind of project I've been waiting for and why I wanted to work for an educational institution. The creators of this training series needed a way to convince their audience that this training is important. They were passionate about the information but it just wasn't coming across in their peruse-on-your-own powerpoint presentations. The hope is that this video is both educational and engaging.

For screen shots and more information about the creation of this video, visit the project on my behance portfolio.


Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Quilling - First Snowflakes

I love snowflakes. I don't know if it's their uniqueness or how beautifully they fall to the ground, but I think they are stunning. Several years ago I realized how much I like the icicle ornaments my mom hangs on her Christmas tree. They sparkle and shimmer and give the tree a somewhat uniform look, which it seems to need when it doesn't have tinsel (which is a pain) or garland (which I don't like). In the past I have not had much luck trying to get my hands on a bunch of icicle ornaments, but a couple of snowflake ornaments got me thinking that maybe they should be the unifying element in our tree. So, after striking out at the stores, I began looking into making some.

I came across some beautiful snowflakes made by quilling paper. I started pinning what I found, and then one day, after attempting this quilling thing with a toothpick and paper shredded in a shredder (don't try it, it doesn't work very well), I headed over to a craft store to pick up the real tools. I even got some patterns for snowflakes, but after doing a couple of them, I re-affirmed that self-made patterns are more my style. So, here are some of the snowflakes I made in the past couple of months:

A few hints for those also wanting to try this out:
Use a grid or guides. I used grid paper I already had, then used my quilting ruler to get my 60 degree corners. I also didn't want to buy a corkboard just for this, so I used an old piece of foam-core, to which I attached my grid and guides. Then I put down a piece of wax paper so that any glue that seeped out would not adhere my snowflake to the background.

I found someone who suggested adding glitter to make them sparkle, an idea I really liked, but found hard to implement. I was unsuccessful at finding paper that already had glitter in it, so I tried making my own with glitter spray. Unfortunately, this made the spirals relax too much and was difficult to make the glue stick. My solution: adhesive spray, then dump glitter over the snowflake (on wax paper of course), then use glitter spray (to fill in the spaces I missed with the glitter dump) and clear topcoat spray. Also, glitter that's the same color as your paper will hide the places you missed so much better!

I've been thinking... now that Christmas is past, that I should move on to letters and words. But I don't want to attach mine to a background, so I'll have to experiment. That is, if I can get away from the snowflakes.

All photos copyright Katrina Kouba Boles