Mehmet Budak - Portfolyo
2018/6 2018/6
- Page 2 and 3: İÇİNDEKİLER 07 21 31 37 POSTERL
- Page 5 and 6: POSTERLER SATIN ALMA SAHİPLEN Evci
- Page 7 and 8: Evcil hayvan ticareti ve sahiplenme
- Page 9 and 10: ACIBADEM BOSTANCI CADDEBOSTAN CAFER
- Page 11 and 12: Domino’s Pizza’nın çoğunlukl
- Page 13 and 14: CAPITOL AVM 23 NİSAN 2018 13
- Page 15 and 16: Nescafé için basılı ilan tasar
- Page 17: MERCEDES-BENZ X CLASS 2018 17
- Page 20 and 21: 20 2B MAGAZINE
- Page 22 and 23: 22 CONTEMPORARY ISTANBUL
- Page 24 and 25: 24 CAPITOL AVM
- Page 26 and 27: 26 NEW YORK TIMES
- Page 29 and 30: MARKALAMALAR 29
- Page 31 and 32: 2017 31
- Page 33: 2017 33
- Page 36 and 37: 36 SOL/SON YARIM
İÇİNDEKİLER<br />
07<br />
21<br />
31<br />
37<br />
POSTERLER<br />
KONSEPTLER<br />
MARKALAMALAR<br />
DİĞER İŞLER<br />
2 SATIN ALMA SAHİPLEN Evcil hayvan ticareti ve sahiplenmenin önemi hakkında bir farkındalık projesi için poster tasarımı. 2017
MEHMETBUDAK<br />
Tasarıma küçük yaşlardan beri ilgim vardı,<br />
önce lise, sonrasında Maltepe Üniversitesinde<br />
tam burslu olarak grafik tasarım okudum.<br />
Üniversiteden fakülte birincisi<br />
ve lisans ikincisi olarak mezun oldum.<br />
Şu anda hem ajans bünyesinde<br />
hem de freelance olarak hizmet veriyorum.<br />
+90 534 989 9234<br />
mehmertbudak@gmail.com<br />
İŞ DENEYİMİ<br />
ART DIRECTOR @ FREELANCE<br />
2 0 1 0 - HÂLÂ<br />
Kurumsal kimlik tasarımından hareketli grafiğe, poster tasarımından illustrasyonlara pek çok alanda hizmet veriyorum.<br />
jr.ART DIRECTOR @ JUVENIS<br />
Haziran 2 0 1 7 - HÂLÂ<br />
jr.Art Director olarak çalıştığım reklam ajansında<br />
Karsan, Vitra, Anadolu Motor, Winsa, Capitol Avm ve Maltepe Park Avm dahil 30’un üzerinde marka ile çalıştım.<br />
STAJYER @ TRT, GRAFİK TASARIM<br />
Eylül 2 0 1 3 - Haziran 2 0 1 4<br />
Lise stajı için bulunduğum Trt’de hareketli grafik ve 3 boyutlu modelleme üzerine çalıştım.<br />
EĞİTİM<br />
GRAFİK TASARIM @ MALTEPE ÜNİVERSİTESİ<br />
2 0 1 4 - 2 0 1 8<br />
Tam burslu olarak başladığım okuldan, fakülte birincisi ve lisans ikincisi olarak mezun oldum.<br />
YAZILIM<br />
ILLUSTRATOR<br />
INDESIGN<br />
AFTER EFFECTS<br />
PHOTOSHOP<br />
LIGHTROOM<br />
3D S MAX<br />
SATIN ALMA SAHİPLEN Evcil hayvan ticareti ve sahiplenmenin önemi hakkında bir farkındalık projesi için poster tasarımı. 2017<br />
3
POSTERLER<br />
SATIN ALMA SAHİPLEN Evcil hayvan ticareti ve sahiplenmenin önemi hakkında bir farkındalık projesi için poster tasarımı. 2017<br />
5
6 SATIN ALMA SAHİPLEN
Evcil hayvan ticareti ve sahiplenmenin önemi hakkında bir farkındalık projesi için poster tasarımı. 2017<br />
7
8 NIKE AIR JORDAN 1 RETRO “LOS ANGELES”
ACIBADEM BOSTANCI CADDEBOSTAN CAFERAĞA DUMLUPINAR EĞİTİM ERENKÖY Fenerbahçe feneryolu fİkİrtepe GÖZTEPE<br />
HASANPAŞA KOŞUYOLU KOZYATAĞI MERDİVENKÖY ONDOKUZMAYIS OSMANAĞA RASİMPAŞA SAHRAYICEDİT SUADİYE ZÜHTÜPAŞA<br />
KADIKÖY (KHALKEDON) 2017<br />
9
10 DOMINO’S TURKSIH PIZZA
Domino’s Pizza’nın çoğunlukla erkeklerin aldığı ve satışının düştüğü belirtilen pizzası için konsept ilan tasarımı. 2017<br />
11
12 HER İNSAN GÖRDÜĞÜ RÜYANIN TABİRİDİR -SIGMUND FREUD 2018
CAPITOL AVM 23 NİSAN 2018<br />
13
14 NESCAFĒ
Nescafé için basılı ilan tasarımı. 2017<br />
15
16 MONOKROM 2018
MERCEDES-BENZ X CLASS 2018<br />
17
KONSEPTLER<br />
19
20 2B MAGAZINE
2b isimli aylık görsel iletişim dergisi için konsept çalışması. 2016<br />
21
22 CONTEMPORARY ISTANBUL
2018<br />
23
24 CAPITOL AVM
Capitol Avm’nin 25. yıl kutlamaları için imaj konsepti. 2018<br />
25
26 NEW YORK TIMES
0 735850 062501 ><br />
VOL.CLXVI ... No. 57,571<br />
“All the News<br />
That’s Fit to Print”<br />
$ 2.50<br />
NEWYORK, TUESDAY,<br />
APRIL 18, 2018<br />
Late Edition<br />
Today, cooler, sunshine, some<br />
afternoon clouds, high 60.<br />
Tonight, becoming cloudy, low<br />
46. Tomorrow, mostly cloudy,<br />
chilly, showers late, high 56.<br />
Weather map is on Page C8.<br />
Critics See Signs<br />
Of Interference<br />
In French Vote<br />
Close race in last days<br />
By Andrew Higgins<br />
PARIS — The flagging,<br />
scandal-plagued presidential<br />
campaign of François Fillon — a<br />
former prime minister of France<br />
much liked by the Kremlin but not<br />
so much, it seems, by French<br />
voters — received a surprise lift<br />
late last month with a report that<br />
he had staged a remarkable<br />
recovery in opinion polls and was<br />
now leading the pack ahead of<br />
voting this Sunday.<br />
“The Return of Fillon to the<br />
Head of Opinion Polls,” declared<br />
the bold headline, contradicting<br />
other French polls suggesting<br />
that the onetime favorite had<br />
fallen to third or even fourth place<br />
as he battled corruption charges.<br />
As it happens, Mr. Fillon’s lead<br />
in the polls existed only in a world<br />
of alternative facts shared by the<br />
French-language service of<br />
Sputnik, a state-funded Russian<br />
news operation with the motto<br />
“Telling the Untold.” For weeks,<br />
Sputnik and a second Russian<br />
outfit, the new French-language<br />
arm of RT, a Kremlin-funded<br />
television station, have published<br />
reports that critics characterized<br />
as “Telling the Untrue” but that<br />
fans welcomed as a breath of<br />
contrarian fresh air.<br />
The broader question as France<br />
charges toward the first round of<br />
the presidential election on<br />
Sunday, however, is what exactly<br />
lies behind what looks to many,<br />
particularly supporters of the<br />
liberal front-runner, Emmanuel<br />
Macron, like a replay of Russia’s<br />
interference in the presidential<br />
election in the United States last<br />
year. Is Moscow meddling<br />
covertly.<br />
Continued on Page A6<br />
LEE JIN-MAN/ASSOCIATED PRESS<br />
A Warning, but No Red Lines<br />
Vice President Mike Pence visited the demilitarized zone on Monday as the U.S. kept its options open on North Korea. Page A8.<br />
Trump’s Promise<br />
To Fix Tax Code<br />
Is Boggnig Down<br />
Long Odds In Congress<br />
By Alan Rappeport<br />
WASHINGTON — President<br />
Trump’s promise to enact a<br />
sweeping overhaul of the tax code<br />
is in serious jeopardy nearly 100<br />
days into his tenure, and his<br />
refusal to release his own tax<br />
returns is emerging as a central<br />
hurdle to another faltering<br />
campaign promise.<br />
As procrastinators rushed to file<br />
their tax returns by Tuesday, the<br />
White House press secretary, Sean<br />
Spicer, emphasized again on<br />
Monday that Mr. Trump had no<br />
intention of making his public.<br />
Democrats have seized on that<br />
decision, uniting around a pledge<br />
not to cooperate on any rewriting<br />
of the tax code unless they know<br />
specifically how that revision<br />
would benefit the billionaire<br />
president and his family.<br />
And a growing roster of more than<br />
a dozen Republican lawmakers<br />
now say Mr. Trump should release<br />
them. “If he doesn’t release his<br />
returns, it is going to make it<br />
much more difficult to get tax<br />
reform done,” said Senator Chuck<br />
Schumer, the Democratic leader,<br />
pointing out that the president has<br />
significant conflicts of interest on<br />
issues such as taxation of the real<br />
estate industry and elimination of<br />
the estate tax. “It’s in his own<br />
self-interest.”<br />
With Republicans sharply divided<br />
on a path forward and the<br />
administration unable to come up<br />
with a plan of its own, the<br />
Democratic resistance is only the<br />
newest impediment.<br />
As a candidate, Mr. Trump<br />
declared that he understood<br />
America’s complex tax laws “better<br />
than anyone who has ever run for<br />
president” and that he alone could<br />
fix them. But it is becoming<br />
increasingly unlikely that there<br />
will be a simpler system, or even<br />
lower tax rates, this time next<br />
year. The Trump administration’s<br />
tax plan, promised in February,<br />
has yet to materialize; a House<br />
Republican plan has bogged down,<br />
taking as much fire from<br />
conservatives as liberals; and on<br />
Monday, Treasury Secretary<br />
Steven Mnuchin told The<br />
Financial Times that the<br />
administration’s goal of getting a<br />
tax plan signed by August was<br />
“not realistic at this point.”<br />
Continued on Page A14<br />
Video of Killing Casts<br />
Facebook In Harsh Light<br />
By Mike Isaac<br />
and Christopher Mele<br />
SAN FRANCISCO — On Easter, Steve Stephens drove around<br />
downtown Cleveland on what he said was a mission to commit<br />
murder — and soon he had an audience of millions for his<br />
shooting of Robert Godwin Sr., 74, which he recorded and posted<br />
on Facebook, the police in Cleveland said.<br />
On Monday, the authorities nationwide were looking for Mr.<br />
Stephens, 37, with the police as far away as Philadelphia saying<br />
they had received calls about sightings of him in that area.<br />
Now Facebook is facing a backlash over the shooting video, as it<br />
grapples with its role in policing content on its global platform.<br />
It is an issue that Facebook, the world’s largest social network,<br />
has had to contend with more frequently as it has bet big on new<br />
forms of media like live video, which give it a venue for more<br />
lucrative advertising. The criticism of Facebook over Mr.<br />
Stephens’s video built swiftly Monday, with critics calling it a<br />
dark time for the company and outrage spreading on social<br />
media over how long it had taken — more than two hours — for<br />
the video to be pulled down. Ryan A. Godwin, the victim’s<br />
grandson, pleaded with other users on social media to stop<br />
sharing the video online.<br />
The situation is increasingly fraught for Facebook. Even as it has<br />
become a forum for more sensational events, live and otherwise,<br />
it has said it does not want to be a media company that overly<br />
arbitrates what is posted on its site. But the more reluctant it is<br />
to intervene or the slower it is to respond, the more it may open<br />
itself to the posting of killings, sexual assaults and other crimes.<br />
“Any of these platforms — especially live ones — encourages<br />
users to perform,” said Elizabeth Joh, a law professor at the<br />
University of California, Davis. “Should Facebook have a duty to<br />
rescue a crime victim? Should we, or is it O.K. for thousands or<br />
millions of people to watch a crime unfold without doing<br />
anything except sharing it?”<br />
Continued on Page A25<br />
Tom Wolfe,<br />
Pyrotechnic Nonfiction Writer<br />
and Novelist, Dies<br />
Combing Through an Archive<br />
By Deirde Carmody and William Grimes<br />
FRED CONRAD/THE NEW YORK TIMES<br />
He wrote “The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test,” “Bonfire of the<br />
Vanities” and “The Right Stuff,” and pioneered the New<br />
Journalism of the 1960s and ’70s. He was 88.<br />
Call It ‘Crossfire Hurricane’:<br />
The Early Days of the Trump Inquiry<br />
By Matt Apuzzo, Adam Goldman<br />
and Nicholas Fandos<br />
WASHINGTON — Within hours of opening an investigation into<br />
the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia in the summer of 2016, the<br />
F.B.I. dispatched a pair of agents to London on a mission so<br />
secretive that all but a handful of officials were kept in the dark.<br />
Their assignment, which has not been previously reported, was<br />
to meet the Australian ambassador, who had evidence that one of<br />
Donald J. Trump’s advisers knew in advance about Russian<br />
election meddling. After tense deliberations between Washington<br />
and Canberra, top Australian officials broke with diplomatic<br />
protocol and allowed the ambassador, Alexander Downer, to sit<br />
for an F.B.I. interview to describe his meeting with the campaign<br />
adviser, George Papadopoulos.<br />
The agents summarized their highly unusual interview and sent<br />
word to Washington on Aug. 2, 2016, two days after the<br />
investigation was opened. Their report helped provide the<br />
foundation for a case that, a year ago Thursday, became the<br />
special counsel investigation. But at the time, a small group of<br />
F.B.I. officials knew it by its code name: Crossfire Hurricane.<br />
that continues to tear shingles off the bureau. Days after they<br />
closed their investigation into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private<br />
email server, agents began scrutinizing the campaign of her<br />
Republican rival. The two cases have become inextricably linked<br />
in one of the most consequential periods in the history of the<br />
F.B.I.<br />
This month, the Justice Department inspector general is<br />
expected to release the findings of its lengthy review of the<br />
F.B.I.’s conduct in the Clinton case. The results are certain to<br />
renew debate over decisions by the F.B.I. director at the time,<br />
James B. Comey, to publicly chastise Mrs. Clinton in a news<br />
conference, and then announce the reopening of the investigation<br />
days before Election Day. Mrs. Clinton has said those<br />
actions buried her presidential hopes.<br />
Continued on Page B96<br />
The name, a reference to the Rolling Stones lyric “I was born in a<br />
crossfire hurricane,” was an apt prediction of a political storm<br />
In Swing State,<br />
Trump Backers Turn Impatient<br />
By Matt Flegenheimer<br />
BENSALEM, Pa. — One after another, the gamblers totter along<br />
the twisting walkway, bathed in artificial purple light —<br />
burdened, at least occasionally, by the instinct that they should<br />
have known better.<br />
Usually, this pathway outside Parx Casino is reserved for<br />
self-flagellation, a private lament at the last hundred lost. But<br />
lately, as with most any gathering place around here since late<br />
January — the checkout line, the liquor store, the park nearby<br />
where losing lottery numbers are pressed into the mulch —<br />
patrons have found occasion to project their angst outward,<br />
second-guessing a November wager.<br />
“Just like any other damn president,” sighed Theresa Remington,<br />
44, a home-care worker and the mother of two active-duty<br />
Marines, scraping at an unlit cigarette. She had voted for<br />
Donald J. Trump because she expected him to improve conditions<br />
for veterans and overhaul the health care system. Now?<br />
“Political bluster,” Ms. Remington said, before making another<br />
run at the quarter slots. She wondered aloud how Senator Bernie<br />
Sanders of Vermont might have fared in the job.<br />
out a closer-than-expected victory last week in a House race in a<br />
Kansas congressional district that Mr. Trump had carried by 27<br />
points. Another stress test arrives Tuesday, with a special<br />
election for a House seat in Georgia.<br />
But it is here, among voters in one of the nation’s few true tossup<br />
districts, where any lasting strain may be felt most acutely.<br />
In consecutive presidential elections, Pennsylvania’s Eighth<br />
District, which includes Bucks County and pockets of<br />
Montgomery County, has delivered Republican nominees their<br />
narrowest margins of victory in a congressional district. Mitt<br />
Romney won it by one-tenth of a point in 2012. Mr. Trump<br />
prevailed by two-tenths, attracting many of the relatively<br />
affluent and educated white suburban voters who were expected<br />
to lift Hillary Clinton, last year’s Democratic candidate.<br />
Continued on Page MAU2018<br />
Such is a view from this swing county of a swing region of a<br />
swing state that powered Mr. Trump’s improbable victory, an<br />
electoral thermometer for a president slogging toward the end of<br />
his first 100 days. Across the country, Republican officials have<br />
grown anxious at their standing on even ruby-red turf, sweating<br />
©2018 The New York Times Company<br />
MEHMETBUDAK/141203021<br />
2018<br />
27
MARKALAMALAR<br />
29
30 ECEYHAN
2017<br />
31
Ahmet <strong>Budak</strong><br />
Founder<br />
+90 507 669 35 22<br />
ahmetebudak@gmail.com<br />
studyosumo.com<br />
Ahmet <strong>Budak</strong><br />
Founder<br />
+90 507 669 35 22<br />
ahmetebudak@gmail.com<br />
studyosumo.com<br />
Ahmet <strong>Budak</strong><br />
Founder<br />
+90 507 669 35 22<br />
ahmetebudak@gmail.com<br />
studyosumo.com<br />
dak<br />
22<br />
@gmail.com<br />
om<br />
Ahmet <strong>Budak</strong><br />
Founder<br />
+90 507 669 35 22<br />
ahmetebudak@gmail.com<br />
studyosumo.com<br />
32 STUDYO SUMO
2017<br />
33
DİĞER İŞLER<br />
35
36 SOL/SON YARIM
WAKE UP CUP<br />
37