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BARBARA WEI Graphic Design for Publishing at Norwich University of the Arts Editorial Web design Page layout design Magazine design Art Direction Photography Work Experience Design intern in Springfield creative (Taiwan) summer 2017 Contact 07743 577 171 [email protected] www.barbarawei.myportfolio.com Instagram: @design.barb Linkedin: @barbarawei B W

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Page 1: Instagram: Editorial Web design Art Direction Photography · Graphic Design for Publishing. at Norwich University of the Arts. Editorial. Web design Page layout design. Magazine design

BARBARA WEIGraphic Design for Publishing at Norwich University of the Arts

EditorialWeb designPage layout designMagazine designArt DirectionPhotography

Work Experience

Design intern in Springfield creative (Taiwan) summer 2017

Contact

07743 577 171barbarawei.design@gmail .com

www.barbarawei.myportfolio.comInstagram: @ d e s i g n . b a r bLinkedin: @ b a r b a r a w e i

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Photography

The journeys creates meI travel, I live and I see

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This project is based on the perceptive on Chinese New Years in Taiwan. I take the photos and create this editorial publication.

The whole concept of the book, things like the colour and the format are based on Chinses new year, an important holiday in Chinese culture. I collected the features of Chinese new year in Taiwan and designed this book in Mandarin, sharing the moment, the culture and the attractive from Taiwan. As you see, the square format is from spring couplets, which are one of the traditions to make wishes for a better new year.

City Perspective

Taiwan

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Morocco2019

Under the palm tree

Morocco2019

Take a catnap

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Extrodinary Vienna2018

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Seaside

Gorleston on Sea2019

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Ordinary shadow Norwich2020

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Days Norwich2020

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S-A-V-O-RFeaturing the fabulous moment of solitude.

Uncover the personal and curious

relationships we have when we are alone.No. 3 Sep 2019

I am not invisible

Little gallerybe yourself

The Feature article

written by Angela

S-A-V-O-RFeaturing fabulous alone moments.

Uncovers the personal and curious

relationships we have when we are alone.

No. 2 Aug 2019

40 days alone in the U.S.Little gallery: Into Morocco

The Feature article written

by Barbara Wei

S-A-V-O-R

Featuring fabulous alone moments.

Uncovers the personal and curious

relationships we have when we are alone.No. 2 Aug 2019

40 days alone in the U.S.

Little gallery: Into Morocco

The Feature article written

by Barbara Wei

S-A-V-O-RFeaturing fabulous alone moments.

uncovers the personal and curious

relationships we have when we are alone.No. 1 May 2019

The lost art of solitude

The Feature article post

written by Leo Babauta

S-A-V-O-RFeaturing fabulous alone moments.

Uncovers the personal and curious

relationships we have when we are alone.

No. 2 Aug 2019

40 days alone in the USALittle gallery: Into Morocco

The Feature article written

by Barbara Wei

EditorialMy stories emplify my outcomes

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This project allows us to experiment with an open-ended approach to the generation of typography and type as images, and to develop a detailed method for typesetting long-form text. I choose a Ted talk about Yarn bombing and capture the vital quality and the feature of Yarn bombing in typography treatment in each layout design.

Also, I think carefully about the tone and delivery of the speaker and the subject matter of the talk to generate appropriate conceptual thinking to underpin my design decisions.

Chapbook

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WillkommenWelcome

WienVienna

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This is a publication records the trip to Vienna. In response to visualising a trip that I travel alone.

It encourages experimental approaches to typographic design, use of image and layout, whilst developing appropriate software skills and the techniques of folding, formats and paper stocks.

A publication records the travel experience. In this publication, documented the lovely time in Vienna. I part my travel into five sections, Art, museum, food, local, and death, which I reckoned is a good way to organize a magazine and to create a system for it.

Wien magazine

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Vienna has its own very special note. And not just when it comes to music. When it comes to shopping, too, you’ll find much that is refreshingly different!

Shopping in the Old City

Also, you can fine the Design souvenirs from Vienna.Those on the search for special souvenirs from Vienna will find them in stores with a select designer offering.

Design souvenirs from Vienna

The MQ Point is more than just a run-of-the-mill museum shop, it stocks cool design and unconventional gifts including mugs, bags, buttons and T-shirts with fun messages. Every month the store picks a designer of the month and goes on to market products created by the winner at affordable prices. The result is an exciting cross-section of the Austrian and international design scenes.

MQ Pointin the MuseumsQuartier/main entranceMuseumsplatz 1, 1070 Wienwww.mqpoint.atdaily, 10:00 - 19:00

NaschmarktWienzeile, 1060 Wienwww.wienernaschmarkt.eubetween Karlsplatz and KettenbrückengasseU4: Station KettenbrückengasseU1, U2, U4: Station KarlsplatzMo - Fr, 06:00 - 19:30Sa, 06:00 - 18:00

Vienna’s best-known market has around 120 market stands and restaurants for a colorful culinary offering ranging from Viennese to Indian, from Vietnamese to Italian. The Naschmarkt has developed into a meeting point for young and old. The colorful throng is worth seeing, even if you don't want to buy anything. Particularly pleasant is sitting outdoors on the Naschmarkt in summer, eating, drinking and watching people go about their business.

The MQ Point is where culture meets kitsch, and serious art rubs shoulders with offbeat humor. It sells imaginative products as well as museum tickets.

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The days in Vienna are all beautiful. In this magazine, I part them in five sections- art, museum, religion, food, street and death.

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AlpengartenLandstrasser Gürtel 1, 1030 Wienwww.bundesgaerten.at23 March to 05 August Daily 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., closed in bad weather

The gardens of the Belvedere are a highlight of Baroque landscape architecture. A reflecting pool was created in front of the place, in which the building's façade is reflected. The large terraces with ponds connect the Upper to the Lower Belvedere. The

Kammergarten was originally reserved only for the man of the house and his closest associates. The Alpine Garden in the palace park is the oldest in Europe.

Belvedere

The Belvedere is not only a magnificent Baroque palace but also houses one of Austria's most valuable art collections – with key works by Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele and Oskar Kokoschka.

Prinz-Eugen-Straße 27, 1030 Wienwww.belvedere.at

Prince Eugene of Savoy (1663-1736), successful general and art connoisseur, had Belvedere garden palace built by Johann Lukas von Hildebrandt as his summer residence – at the time it was still outside the gates of the city. This baroque architectural jewel consists of two palaces (Upper and Lower Belvedere), which today house Austrian art from the Middle Ages to the present day. The heart of the Belvedere collection is formed by the 24 paintings of Gustav Klimt with his golden images "The Kiss" and "Judith". Klimt's "The Kiss" in particular is world-famous. The 180 x 180 cm painting was created in 1908/09 and shows Klimt and his friend Emilie Flöge as a couple in love. "The Kiss" is probably Austria's most famous work of art. Klimt's portraits of women also impress and be marveled at in the Upper Belvedere. The permanent exhibition at the Upper Belvedere was completely redesigned at the beginning of 2018: a total of 420 works can be seen in seven themed rooms spread over three floors. Thematically, the tour starts with the history of the Belvedere. In the other rooms, works of art from the Middle Ages, Baroque, Classicism and Biedermeier periods are shown. A separate, large area on the first floor is naturally dedicated to Vienna Modernism and the art of 1900, where Klimt's "Kiss" has found its new home. Finally, the art of the inter-war and post-war periods is shown on the second floor.

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ZentralfriedhofStretching over more than two square kilometers, the great Central Cemetery hosts perhaps the world's largest concentration of memorials honoring the dead. Among those interred here are Ludwig van Beethoven, Franz Schubert, Johann Strauss and Johannes Brahms.

Simmeringer Hauptstraße 234 1110 WienNovember to February Mo - Su, 08:00 - 17:00March Mo - Su, 07:00 - 18:00April Mo - Su, 07:00 - 19:00May to August Mo - Su, 07:00 - 20:00September Mo - Su, 07:00 - 19:00October to November Mo - Su, 07:00 - 18:00on holidays, 10:00 - 17:00

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Why Can’'t I Walk 5 Blocks

Without Seeing Carhartt PRODUCTS?

“The Carhartt product has become a millennial basic.”

By Lauren Levy

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Photographer: Jonathan Daniel Pryce

Haute is a magazine for fashion on and beyond the clothing. It is a space to provoke existing dialogues and challenges established ideas and celebrates iniquities. Our creative direction departs from present day fashion magazine aesthetics, we are aiming for a unique style of photography for each photoshoot. Haute will discuss the Social, Lifestyle, Music and Nostalgic Impact of fashion on contemporary culture in and outside the high fashion.

We focus more on the individual in our interviews and features, giving the subject the platform to express their journey. We are addressing inequality and misrepresentation in the industry of fashion through a platform of creative editorial work inspired by an alternative lifestyle.

Haute magazine

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That’s what Marian Park, an editor and trend specialist at WGSN, emailed me about the 31-year-old workwear classic that’s reached peak beanie ubiquity this winter. It’s tagged in 7,612 Instagrams. It’s on skaters in downtown Manhattan. It’s been photographed on Rihanna. It’s tied (with a pocket tee) for a spot as the brand’s top-selling item. In New York, it’s inescapable.

But how did we get here? Carhartt was a workwear company founded in 1889 in Michigan for railroad workers and blue-collar manual laborers. It’s rise to the city streets and street-style cool seems like an unlikely turn. So how has something with such a rugged and utilitarian history — a brand beloved in Alaska and worn by Sarah Palin — become as popular among the same people you might otherwise find in color-blocked leggings and carrying an Outdoor Voices tote?

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The answer is a mixed bag of fashion coincidences, but it begins with Carharrt’s own evolution. The beanie was first released in 1987. Soon after, in the early ’90s, the all-American line took off amongst rappers, and the Swiss jeans designer Edwin Feah began importing the clothes to Europe guessing that he was getting in early on the next big thing. Almost instantly they became popular amongst skaters (similar to Eastpak backpacks). It was such a big hit abroad, and in a crowd so different than construction workers, that by 1994 Feah formalized a relationship with the brand, developing his own line called Carhartt Work In Progress for which he tailored existing Carhartt clothes to better fit skaters needs and preferred silhouettes, while still keeping that signature high quality duck canvas. The beanie mostly remained the same, although even today the WIP version uses slightly different threads and materials.

WIP has been in Europe since ’94 (and the beanies have been a staple for at least the last ten years there), but thanks to an agreement with the original Carhartt, WIP only entered the U.S. market in 2011 with a store in Soho. It was around that time that A.P.C. collaborated with WIP on a few pieces, including a beanie, that instantly elevated the brand to fashion relevancy. A year later, Rihanna was photographed in a neon-yellow one, a signature color from the original Carhartt.

Then things really started to spike about three years ago, says Tony Ambroza, Carhartt’s chief brand officer, when skate culture began its march into the mainstream. WIP, with its historical European skater associations, moved on up with it. As streetwear made its way to the runway, the brands that have operated around it got a second wind, too. But it wasn’t just skater culture. Workwear also became influential in street fashion, where it’s worn not “to look like a foreman from the gold rush, but in the neo-’90s way of hip-hop artists and skaters,” says Jian DeLeon editorial director at Highsnobiety. The confluence of skate and workwear made the chore coats, canvas Detroit jackets, and work pants that have been popular in street fashion just as common on runways and in limited-release collections. Deleon continues, “Remember that scene in Clueless when Cher talked about how guys at her school dress in baggy pants?” That’s back. And that’s also Carhartt. It’s skatewear becoming mainstream, as the ’90s return, and it’s a bit of leftover normcore, too, with a no-nonsense, practical but not flashy approach to dressing. I mean, what could you possibly wear with your rolled-up Dickies pants if not a Carhartt beanie?

It’s also authenticity, that overused buzzword, that’s shifting. As Deleon explains, “Authenticity is evolving into provenance. They both mean the same thing: Here is a company with a proven track record of reliable good products with an enduring appeal.” Carhartt delivers on the promise.

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And, after all of that, once people realize that they want provenance and Carhartt, it’s the beanie people buy because it’s cheap. You can find Carhartt beanies anywhere from an Army and Navy warehouse to a boutique store — a rare case of retail ubiquity that all but ensures its place in the Zeitgeist — and still it’ll always be just $10. Always something all the kids can buy, even when they can’t afford new jackets from the Carhartt and Junya Watanabe collaboration that show off the very same sewn-on logo that sits right at the center of the cap.

Now, you might think that we’ve reached peak beanie, as we did when we started writing this piece, but the trend forecasters would politely disagree: Although it feels like they’re everywhere now, Park from WGSN thinks it’s still yet to top off. She’s anticipating a mass-market explosion come 2019.

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street look sty listur ban trend y

looksIS EVERY-WHERE NOWA millen-nial basic

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H A U T E

How The suit Wear

set by Street Style

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By ELLIE PITHERS

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Never considered a suit, on the grounds that it's too sensible a wardrobe staple? Good news: the two-piece is breaking out of its comfort zone. Whether rendered in pink corduroy or styled with pops of neon, take pointers from the pavements of the best suiting tricks to try now.

Take the corduroy roadNever considered pink cord? Now's the time: Mango, & Other Stories and Boden all have generously-cut suiting to ease you through the between-seasons twilight zone.

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Say hello to athleisure 2.0Gently tapered and cropped at the ankle: tracksuit trousers have grown up for autumn. Take them for a ladylike spin with a sharp-shouldered blazer and glossy mules.

H A U T E

Mix your printsAutumn's catwalks dictate big cat prints, worn head-to-toe. Not your bag? Just take a flash - you'll find it energises a grey suit.

Wildcard neons mean businessPops of neon are the swiftest way to relieve a sturdy black suit of its corporate status. Try fluoro pink or highlighter orange for the freshest take.

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Take a size upOversized suiting still has currency; elevate the grunge overtones via delicate chain-link jewellery and a Polly Pocket-sized top-handle bag.

Subvert the Nineties stereo-typeCropped lengths and rope belts? Two items best left in the annals of Nineties style - unless they're revived via a linen suit (crocodile-print handbag, optional).

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7/7 Catch a tanNothing looks chicer than two-piece tan right now. Wear with shearling slides until temperates plunge, when Western-flavoured boots will prove the sleekest pairing.

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The Best Street Style

From Couture Fashion Week

As Haute Couture Week makes its extravagant entrance with the spring/summer 2020 collections in Paris, Vogue’s Jonathan Daniel Pryce cap-tures the best-dressed attendees.

By Orla Pentelow

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Paris’s biannual haute couture shows are the epitome of craftsmanship and creativity. The spring/summer 2020 extravaganza runs until 23 January, and will see the French capital play host to fashion’s most storied houses.

Photographer: Jonathan Daniel Pryce

At Schiaparelli, or “Schiap” to those in-the-know, artis-tic director Daniel Roseberry offered a more realistic take on the surrealism that defines the house. Pierpaolo Piccioli’s highly anticipated offering for Valentino is also on every-one’s radar, as was Maria Grazia Chiuri’s latest at Dior and of course Virginie Viard’s sophomore couture collection at Chanel following Karl Lagerfeld’s passing in February 2019.

Bouchra Jarrar, who had stints at Christian Lacroix, Balenciaga and Lanvin, returns to couture after hitting pause on her own eponymous label in January 2016.

Haute Couture attracts a decadent display away from the catwalk, too. Hollywood stars, supermodels and stylists descend in the hope of finding a gown worthy of the red carpet. Vogue photographer Jonathan Daniel Pryce is there to capture the off-runway action.

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Design a two spreads in the traveling features and in How-to feature for young graduate.

SPD Competitionspreads design

Film Camera Decoded

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Decoded

Film itself, is a thin strip of plastic, covered with an emulsion of silver halide crystals suspended in gelatine base. The chemistry is highly sensitive to light; it has to be handled in complete darkness.

To yield images, the film needs to be washed in additional chemicals; typically developer, bleach, and fixer. Which then produce a negative, meaning that blacks are now white and greens are red. For colour film, this process is referred to as C-41. There are also ways to produce positive images, E6, instant film, monochrome film, and few other alternative methods, including Caffeenol, Beerol, and Piller Cuveeol.

Film photographs can have a distinct look. When the medium is pushed to its limit, altered, aged, or old chemistry is used, it may appear extra grainy, produce colour casts, appear with torn edges, or have unusually low or high contrast levels.

01 WHAT IS FILM PHOTOGRAPHY

Everything You Need to Know to Get Started

With Film Photography Like a Pro.

By Bill Stevenson

22/23Film Camera Decoded

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A rare, desirable medium format camera in good condition could sell for thousands of dollars. On the other hand, you can pick up a solid 35mm SLR for less than $50. The 35mm SLR is most often associated with pro photographers. The 35mm “point n shoot” is another great option for anyone jumping into film.

The 35mm slr is most often associated with pro photographers. These cameras give superb quality images and have setting for a wide variety of different shooting scenarios. These cameras were innovative when they were first released because they allowed the photography to see exactly what the lens captures on the film when framing a shot.

There are hundreds of options to choose from. All sorts of speeds and styles for any shooting situation.

Lower Number Less Sensitive, Smaller Grain, Longer Exposure TimesHigher Number More Sensitive, Larger Grain, Shorter Exposure Times

Lower number film is great for landscapes and still life photos because the subject isn’t moving and you can use a slow shutter-speed on them. They however arn’t very good for indoor photography because they need alot of light. These typically have smaller grain and offer greater detail.

Higher number films are great for indoor and speed shots. These films are more sensitive and will allow for higher shutter-speeds. These films however typically have larger grain, and are less detailed.

SELECTING CAMERA

SELECTING FILM

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Because there’s a large variety of applications, preferences, and variations across models and years it is advised not to expect perfection from even the most expensive pieces.

There is no “best” camera.

100, 200, 400 even 800. These numbers refer to the films sensitivity to light or iso number.

Loading

Before you open the camera’s back make sure that there is no film inside that hasn’t been rewound yet.

Unloading

Each camera has its own quirks when it comes to loading film. Generally, there would be a dedicated lever on the side, or you may be able to pull on the rewind crank. Never apply excessive force to your camera.

When you’ve reached the end of your roll, it’s time to rewind. Many cameras do not let you do that unless you have unlocked them. Cameras with motor will do it for you automatically.

A button to unlock the rewinding mechanism is typically the least conspicuous one and is deliberately made hard to press accidentally. It may look like a tiny metal knob that has little give when you press it. Once you do, you may hear a quiet click. Now you can rewind your film back into your canister.

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04 LOADING THE FILM

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When you’ve shot your first roll of film, it’s time to get it developed and printed. Most camera shops will do it although there are also online services. Expect to pay between $10 and $20 depending on where you go, how many prints you want, how quickly you want it done, and whether you want the negatives scanned as well.

While film is an analog technology, you can get the negatives scanned into digital images so you can edit them, post them on socialmedia, and other-wise do what you like.

GETTING THE FILM DEVELOPEDGOING OUT AND SHOOTING

Once you’ve got your camera loaded with film, it’s time to go out shooting. The ISO is set by the film so that will limit the range of lighting conditions in which you can shoot. If you’ve got a roll of Kodak Portra 400, you’re not going to be able to shoot in super low light.

While your camera probably has an automatic mode, I recommend taking some sort of manual control. Aperture priority mode, as always, is the best compromise. You set

Every photographer, digital or film, would have made mistakes leading to a loss. If you are smart about it, it will happen only once, or never.

Expect to get lots of bad shots until you get a feel for your film camera. But hey, that’s half the fun.

Inside the camera, there would typically be a take-up spool with a way to attach the free end of your film. It’s important to ensure that your film is firmly secured on the take-up spool. A good way to check

Keep rewinding your film until you can feel the motion free up completely. You are looking to have all of the film inside the canister with no tail end remaining. A good way to tell if your film was exposed or not is the that “tail,” which signals that the film is ready to be inserted and used to take photos.

Once all of your film is back in the canister, open that camera up and get it out. It’s time to develop your images at your favourite lab.

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the aperture, the film sets the ISO, and the camera sets the shutter speed. You just need to make sure your aperture is wide enough to give you a fast enough shutter speed.

Note, while the film sets the ISO, your camera might require you to manually enter the film’s ISO value. Newer film cameras detect it automatically but older ones don’t. To find out how to do this, as well as how to change camera mode and dial in settings, check out youcamera’s manual online.

Shooting with film for the first time is an experience. I still look down at the back of my camera expecting to see a preview of the image I just took. You also only get 36 shots before changing film. That’s not a lot if you’re used to just blasting away on burst mode.

The biggest problem you’ll encounter is missing focus. A lot. If your camera is manual focus, then at wider apertures, you’re probably going to be wildly off the mark.

is, once you closed the camera back, that when you crank it, your rewind knob rotates as you wind the film forward. Some cameras have other ways of testing this, while others have none — but you should generally feel the resistance when you advance.

Your first time loading the film camera may be daunting. There’s a way to do this wrong, which may lead to missed exposures or ruined film. But don’t despair.

The 35mm “point n shoot” is another great option for anyone jumping into film. These cameras skip past all the complex settings of slr’s. They however dont have the greatest quality to their pictures. In this case were looking at a Diana mini. This camera exists to take “crappy” photos. It has few settings and gets right down to the fun of taking pictures. The pictures obtained from the Diana are usually soft focus and have other artifacts giving them an artsy look. These cameras are fairly inexpensive and certainly wont break the bank.

24/25Film Camera Decoded

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the travel vibe

NORWICHRULESMr Thanh’s recommendations and said travellers must include Norwich which has ‘scenery as a beautiful as a picture’ on their bucket list, along with the iconic Lombard Street in San Francisco and India’s Zanskar region known as ‘Moon Land’.

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the travel vibe

What to eat, where to go and

how to make it happen.By The Editors

Design a two spreads in the traveling features and in How-to feature for young graduate.

SPD Competitionspreads design

Norwich Rules

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Wandering about having more options for a cup of coffee or tea, or dining in Norwich?

WHAT TO EAT

One day in NorwichNorwich, a decent place to away from London for a day off. “Norwich takes a lot of pride in her heritage but is still a very modern and forward-looking city with plenty of amenities and a thriving economy.”

Norwich Cathedral is a Christian presence in the heart of Norfolk and the Diocese of Norwich. One of England’s most awe-inspiring Cathedrals built over 900 years ago. Here you’ll find ancient Norman history plus art, culture, music, food, hospitality, learning and worship. The surrounding Cathedral Close also provides a picture-postcard setting ideal for walks.

It is the most complete Norman Cathedral in England and one of the finest examples of Romanesque architecture in Europe, Norwich Cathedral is one of England’s finest Cathedrals with largest stone bosses in the world. There are up to 1000 bosses. The hight of the spire of Norwich Cathedral is 315 ft.

Take a few hours in the Cathedral, enjoying the historical attractions and you are ready to set off to explore the city. Another famous feature you must to visit is Norwich Market. In Norwich Market, there are up to 200 market stalls selling a huge range of products and services- the largest six day open air market in Europe. You can find everything here from food and drink to clothes, pet supplies, books and beauty products.

8 ELM HILLElm Hill, Norwich www.norwich.gov.uk@norwichelmhill

1 BRICKS PIZZA39 Market Pl, Norwich NR2 1NDwww.brick.pizza01603 620661@brickpizza_norwich

3 GONZO’S TEA ROOM68 London St, Norwich NR2 1JTwww.gonzostearoom.com01603 473763@gonzostearoom

5 NORWICH MARKETNorwich Market,St Peters St, Norwich NR2 1NHwww.norwich.gov.uk@norwichmarket

4 GROSVENOR FISH BAR28 Lower Goat Ln, Norwich NR2 1ELwww.fshshop.com01603 625855@grosvenorfishbar

7 THE BICYCLE SHOP17 St Benedicts St, Norwich NR2 4PEwww.thebicycleshopcafe.com01603 625777@thebicycleshopnorwich

2 BIDDY’S TEA ROOM15 Lower Goat Ln, Norwich NR2 1ELwww.biddystearoom.com01603 568019@biddystearoom

9 NORWICH CATHEDRAL24 Castle Meadow, Norwich NR1 3JUwww.museums.norfolk.gov.uk/norwich-castle

10 NORWICH CASTLE24 Castle Meadow, Norwich NR1 3JUwww.museums.norfolk.gov.uk/norwich-castle

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Tacitly tucked on the Pottergate causeway, Rabbit exudes cosy coffee-and-cake ambience. Rebranded from their former name, ‘Roots’, Rabbit delights in dark, snug interiors which welcome you from the bustle of the street into the hygge embrace of plants and contemporary ceramics.

Offering a robust menu of sausage rolls and a variety of delectable warm beverages, Rabbit hits the ‘lunch treat’ spot whilst making all welcome...including our furry dog pals! Relax in the cosy embrace of the plant-laden premises or take your beverage on the go as Rabbit is perfectly situated for those busy city slickers.

Locals have all heard of the new Netflix film, Jingle Jangle, that was partly filmed in Norwich’s own Elm Hill.

Before Elm Hill was festively decked, it was featured in 2007’s sweet fantasy, Stardust, about a man who falls in love with a fallen star. Even local pub the Briton’s arms was given a Hollywood makeover to turn into ‘The Slaughtered Prince.’

Formerly the centre of the weaving industry, this picturesque cobbled street is flanked by medieval houses made of wood and brick. To the north (Tombland) stands the church of St Simon and St Jude, built in late-Perpendicular style, and divided into floors used by local businesses. Further up, on the right, note the 15C thatched Briton Arms as well as a medieval church, St Peter Hungate.

To visit the grand historical feature in Norwich, Norwich Cathedral could be a good start of this journey. If you’re just off the train you can take a lovely walk by the river to Norwich cathedral. Of course you could take the bus to the cathedral, but I would highly recommend enjoying the lovely walk.

Eat+cafe Visit+fun

6 RABBIT CAFE 6 Pottergate, Norwich NR2 1DSrabbitcoffee.co.uk01603 920788@ rabbitcoffee.nr2

Visit places in Norwich, and enjoy day and nightlife.

WHERE TO GO

On the way to market you can choose either take on the lane through Elm Hill or through to the high street via London street. With these two distinguish views you have the opportunities to view Norwich in different ways. You might also like to have a sip of coffee in a coffee shop, some cafe recommendations can be found on the opposite page for you to decide your own place to have a slow-down moment in the afternoon. These places can give you the best time.

If you want to spend time in the evening, there are lots of places where you can enjoy a drink. Go to a pub having a chill moment for night time drink. Gonzo’s tea room, The Bicycle Shop both are great choices for you to stay.

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Vienna Rules

Inside the artisy formula

What to eat, where to go and

how to make it happen.By The Editors

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Design a two spreads in the traveling features and in How-to feature for young graduate.

SPD Competitionspreads design

Vienna Rules

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Explor ing the Kiss .The Be lvedere i s not on ly a magni f icent Baroque pa lace but a lso houses one of Austr ia 's most va luab le ar t co l lect ions – wi th key works “The K iss” by Gustav K l imt , Egon Sch ie le and Oskar Kokoschka .

WHAT TO EAT

NaschmarktVienna’s largest urban market

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Prinz-Eugen-Straße 27,1030 Wienwww.belvedere.at

Th is baroque arch i tectura l jewel cons is ts of two pa laces (Upper and Lower Be lvedere) , which today house Austr ian ar t f rom the Midd le Ages to the present day . The heart of the Be lvedere co l lect ion i s formed by the 24 pa int ings of Gustav K l imt wi th h is go lden images "The K iss " and "Jud i th " .

VISIT

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Wander ing in the Foodies’ heaven.Vienna’s best -known market has been around s ince 1786. From Monday to Saturday th is i s the perfect p lace , not on ly to get you someth ing to eat or to shop, but a lso to immerse yourse l f in V ienna’s cu l ture .

Naschmarkt in V ienna has a h int of the atmosphere of ten found in or ienta l bazaars . Stro l l ing around the Wiener Naschmarkt i s l ike a cu l inary and cu l tura l journey around the wor ld . Teeming wi th act iv i ty , espec ia l ly on summer evenings , the market i s a wonderfu l p lace to indu lge in cu l inary de l ights .

VISIT

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Wienzeile, 1060 Wienwww.wienernaschmarkt.euU4: Station KettenbrückengasseU1, U2, U4: Station Karlsplatz

Naschmarkt has around 120 market stands and restaurants for a colorful culinary offering ranging from Viennese to Indian, from Vietnamese to Italian. Naschmarkt has developed into a meeting point for young and old. The colorful throng is worth seeing, even if you don't want to buy anything.

If you are in Vienna for 2-3 days and live in a hotel, fresh foods are probably not on your shopping list. Nonetheless, visit Vienna’s most famous urban market to experience the atmosphere and get a little impression of life in Vienna. This is not a tourist trap, but part of the daily life in Vienna. Particularly pleasant is sitting outdoors on the Naschmarkt in summer, eating, drinking and watching people go about their business.

Prince Eugene of Savoy (1663-1736), successful general and art connoisseur, had Belvedere garden palace built by Johann Lukas von Hildebrandt as his summer residence – at the time it was still outside the gates of the city.

Klimt's "The Kiss" in particular is world-famous. The 180 x 180 cm painting was created in 1908/09 and shows Klimt and his friend Emilie Flöge as a couple in love. Klimt's portraits of women also impress and be marveled at in the Upper Belvedere.

The permanent exhibition at the Upper Belvedere was completely redesigned at the beginning of 2018: a total of 420 works can be seen in seven themed rooms spread over three floors. Thematically, the tour starts with the history of the Belvedere. In the other rooms, works of art from the Middle Ages, Baroque, Classicism and Biedermeier periods are shown. A separate, large area on the first floor is naturally dedicated to Vienna Modernism and the art of 1900, where Klimt's "Kiss" has found its new home. Finally, the art of the inter-war and post-war periods is shown on the second floor.

A ref lect ing pool was created in f ront of the p lace , in which the bu i ld ing 's façade is ref lected . The large terraces wi th ponds connect the Upper to the Lower Be lvedere . The Kammergarten was or ig ina l ly reserved on ly for the man of the house and h is c losest assoc iates .

Vis i t the o ldest Alp ine garden in Europe.Alpengarten (A lp ine Gardens) i s one of the o ldest A lp ine gardens in V ienna . Ede lweiss , gent ians and A lp ine roses in the midd le of V ienna .Gardens of the Be lvedere are a h igh l ight of Baroque landscape arch i tecture .

VISIT

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WHERE TO GO

The BelvedereThe magnificent Baroque palac