Nicely Designed Posters
GOOD: A concert poster for an electronic artist is often
very heavy on visuals, but this minimalistic approach works well. The
neon-themed design and purple/blue elements contrast well against the black
brick background and white text. The elements are neatly and simply organized
in a logical order, while the type size ensures easy reading.
GOOD: A movie poster for Mulholland Dr. This design does a
good job at communicating the basic idea and mood of the movie. The viewer can
derive this is a mystery story by the way the woman (Naomi Watts) is looking
off-screen with an apprehensive facial expression. At the top, the darkened
photo of the Hollywood sign communicates ominousness. The viewer knows, by the
poster, that this is a dark mystery film has something to do with Hollywood and
the woman on the phone, making the design effective in its goal.
Ugly and Ineffective
BAD: This design is graphically bland and fails to command
the attention of the viewer. The Cream/yellowish color gradient looks antiquated.
The elements are organized in a centered format which makes it uninteresting.
The poster looks like it was made in MS paint. The logo element seems jammed-in
sitting in the lower left corner and should have been given more prominence. To
improve this design, social media icons would have helped the poster establish
credibility, accompanying the red Facebook link at the bottom.
BAD: This design has elements that are well organized, but
suffers from poor color selection. The piercing neon yellow is difficult for
the eye to look at and makes the viewer turn away before they can read the information
in the small print. The icons at the bottom of the page are nearly indecipherable
due to the lack of contrast between white and this shade of yellow. To improve,
avoid using such a color that is painful to view.
BAD: Here is a poster with a very straight-forward design
for an animal rights and environmental agenda. The poster works except for the
bottom third. With already so much information in small text above, the map and
its adjacent text is superfluous – there are too many websites listed, all in
full “https://”. The YouTube link is especially bad as one would have to type
the entire unique url into their browser, which almost nobody has ever done.
Too improve: shorten URLs, include icons, get rid of google map.
No comments:
Post a Comment