The final stage of the VCD design process requires the designer to make deliberate choices about which methods and media to use in the production and delivery of the resolved design solutions. These are not the same choices made during ideation (where methods are exploratory); at this stage, methods and media are selected specifically because they are the most appropriate way to produce and present the final resolved work at professional quality.
KEY TAKEAWAY: The methods and media used to deliver a final design solution must be chosen deliberately to achieve the highest quality outcome for the specific communication need, audience, context, and production requirements.
By the Deliver phase, most final production uses digital methods — but manual methods may be incorporated for specific aesthetic, expressive, or contextual reasons.
When digital methods are essential:
- Precise, consistent reproduction at any scale
- Production-ready files for commercial printing
- Digital media (websites, apps, screens) that require digital files
- Brand identity systems requiring multiple formats and applications
When manual methods add value:
- Hand-drawn illustration gives a design a distinctive human quality that aligns with the brief’s aesthetic
- Handmade physical prototypes or models test spatial design accurately
- Screen printing, letterpress, or hand-printing produces a tactile, craft quality appropriate for some briefs (artisan brands, cultural events)
- Large-scale mural work for environmental design requires physical application
Contemporary design often combines both:
- Sketch and scan hand-drawn elements, then refine in vector software
- Shoot original photography, then composite and retouch digitally
- Hand-build a scale model, then photograph and add context digitally
Media selection must be aligned with the brief’s communication need:
| Communication Need | Appropriate Media |
|---|---|
| Public event promotion | Large-format print poster, outdoor signage |
| Youth brand identity | Instagram-format digital assets, sticker sheet |
| Corporate annual report | High-quality printed booklet + digital PDF |
| Educational app interface | Interactive digital prototype on screen |
| Retail product packaging | Physical, three-dimensional packaged object |
| Museum exhibition | Environmental installation (physical space + graphic elements) |
EXAM TIP: When describing the methods and media used to deliver your final design solutions, be specific and technical: “The poster was produced as a 600mm × 900mm Adobe Illustrator vector file, exported as a press-ready PDF in CMYK colour mode at 300 DPI with 5mm bleed, for production on uncoated recycled stock.”
COMMON MISTAKE: Describing only the visual content of the final design without explaining the production methods used to deliver it. Examiners want evidence that you understand the technical requirements of your chosen media.
STUDY HINT: For each of your two communication needs, write a simple “production specification” — the medium, the method, the file format, the dimensions, and any special materials or finishes. This is excellent folio documentation and prepares you to answer production-focused exam questions.