Learners distinguish between serif, sans-serif, and display fonts to understand how typography contributes to a design's 'voice.' They practice pairing fonts to create contrast and readability.
Focusing on presence and projection, students practice short speeches and monologues to build performance confidence.
A journey through theater history and the technical language of the stage, from Ancient Greece to modern stage directions.
An introduction to the structure of plays, including characters, settings, and dialogue, where students draft their own short scenes.
Students explore the core tools of an actor: voice, body, and imagination through games and expressive exercises.
Students refine their logo drafts by applying principles of negative space and contrast, creating color and black-and-white versions for professional export.
Students combine their icon and typography choices to build an official brand logo draft, focusing on balance, alignment guides, and the 'Squint Test' for simplicity.
Students master custom shape creation using polyline and curve tools, exploring line weights and the importance of vector scalability for professional branding.
Students move from curating to creating, using Google Drawing to build complex objects with simple geometric shapes while learning the fundamentals of vector design and layering.
Students learn how font choices communicate a brand's tone of voice, distinguishing between serif, sans serif, and display fonts to select a pair that fits their business identity.
Students explore the emotional impact of color in branding, learning to use Hex codes and curated imagery to build a brand mood board that reflects their product's personality.
Students perform quality control on their business proposals through peer review, grammar tools, and text-to-speech auditing before exporting their final work as professional PDFs.