Showing posts with label clipping mask. Show all posts
Showing posts with label clipping mask. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

A postcard from Paris

For our first assignment we had to make a postcard or a series of postcards. We weren't given any direction on what we had to do on the postcard - just that it had to be standard postcard size. 

For my postcard I decided to do a tourist postcard of the kind you could buy while on holiday in Paris to send home to your family or friends. I chose to do a large letter style postcard because I particularly like this style of design. Large letter style postcards - so I am told - are where the images are inside the letters of a word.


This style of postcard could easily be adapted to a different theme; I picked Paris for practical reasons. The word Paris is short (only 5 letters) and fits easily on a postcard, while still allowing the individual letters to be large enough to see the images inside them. Additionally, it was easy to find suitable images of Paris as it’s such a well known and popular tourist location. (All images used in this assignment are from Wikimedia Commons and are credited below).

Initially I made the postcard on a white background and after doing so thought that it might look as good or better on a black background and so I made a second version of it.


In both postcards, each letter of the word Paris has a photo attached to it with a clipping mask. I wanted to make sure that my postcard would contain some highly recognizable images so I started with the Eiffel Tower and then followed that with the Arc de Triomphe. Once these two were happily matched to a letter that worked for them, I found other photos to fill the remaining letters.

I have chosen different text effects for the word Paris on the second postcard because the effects I used on the white postcard would not have been effective on a black background. Switching the font (for the "City of Lights" line) and adjusting the layout slightly was simply to try something different.

Originally I couldn't decide which version I prefer, but I've finally decided that the white versions wins (by a hair).

But what do you think?  Do you agree with me, or do you prefer the black postcard?

Jess :-)

ps. Click on either of the two images above to see a larger version of them.



Image Credits
1. Pont Neuf at Sunset by Steve, CC: BY-SA, sourced from Wikimedia Commons 
2. EiffelTower from north Avenue de New York, Aug 2010 by Julie Anne Workman, CC: BY-SA, sourced from Wikimedia Commons
3. Arc Triomphe by Benh LIEU SONG, CC: BY-SA, sourced from Wikimedia Commons
4. Sacre-coeur-paris by MykReeve, CC: BY-SA, sourced from Wikimedia Commons
5. Le Louvre – Aile Richelieu by Gloumouth1, CC: BY-SA, sourced from Wikimedia Commons


Monday, June 4, 2012

A multi-photo layout using clipping masks

Here's the flyer I made in week 13's lesson which was on how to do a multi-photo layout using clipping masks.


Each of the flower photos is attached to a clipping mask to hide the parts of each photo I didn't want showing on my flyer. We were given the photos and guided through a tutorial on how to create a series of four clipping masks across the top of the layout.

Then we were left to our own devices to decide how much of each photo we wanted to show though each clipping mask and to come up with some text that suited our layout. The first thing that occurred to me was that it looked like a flyer for photography lessons so that's what I went with. If it were a flyer for a real business, it'd probably have more details about the class on the back.

This layout could easily be adapted for a different purpose, just swap in different images and text. (I believe our lecturer got the idea from a baby announcement card).

*The photos used were supplied by our lecturer (and I'm pretty sure she said that she had take all these photos) which makes the images (c) Sandra Motteram