I have a question. I watched your previous videos and know about 3 levels of hierearchy. If the Primary Hook is the largest and most legible one, then if I use contrast in layers does the big image under or type on top (for the first type of this contrast technique) will be the Primary Hook? I look forward to hearing from you.
I love all the info that you are sharing, I just have one question what do you consider the most common poster size? There are so many options online that it is confusing..
Good clear precise talk. But we're talking nuance here and I should tell you the misspelled noisy really threw me out of the cohesive structure of the lecture. That's just me I suppose. But we're talking cohesive design aren't we?
Thank you. Though in fact, we are not talking about nuance here, we are talking about one of the common pillars of design that was relevant 80+ years ago, and will be relevant in another 80+ years which is important for new and aspiring designers to be aware of. As you may have seen with your eagle eye, there are lots of poster examples demonstrated in this video, some going all the way back to 1941 and others as recent as 2019 all utilising layers to establish visual hierarchy in various ways. This is a 7-minute video, with lots of visual examples with countless hours of research. I’m sure you can find fault, but I think we can look past a minor spelling mistake and appreciate the larger lesson for beginners here. As a person who struggles with dyslexia, I’m surprised there are not more, it’s not my first and it won't be my last.
This video is part of the Poster Design eBook.
Get the eBook here: th-cam.com/video/q3tLbvp9MNE/w-d-xo.html
Thanks, David! It's always an insightful learning experience watching your videos.
Glad to hear that! More to come!
@@GarethDavidStudio thanks a lot, Sir
Thank you for posting this ☺️
No problem 😊 What did you make of it?
great lesson . thumbs up
Thank you!
I have a question. I watched your previous videos and know about 3 levels of hierearchy. If the Primary Hook is the largest and most legible one, then if I use contrast in layers does the big image under or type on top (for the first type of this contrast technique) will be the Primary Hook? I look forward to hearing from you.
I love all the info that you are sharing, I just have one question what do you consider the most common poster size? There are so many options online that it is confusing..
Just use A3 canvas size .
Hey Gareth! Any ETA on the ebook?
What program should we use?
For Poster Design, I would recommend Photoshop or Illustrator
It does not...if the concept (story) and artwork is shit the entire design will fall apart. No matter how often you move your elements around...
Good clear precise talk.
But we're talking nuance here and I should tell you the misspelled noisy really threw me out of the cohesive structure of the lecture. That's just me I suppose. But we're talking cohesive design aren't we?
Thank you.
Though in fact, we are not talking about nuance here, we are talking about one of the common pillars of design that was relevant 80+ years ago, and will be relevant in another 80+ years which is important for new and aspiring designers to be aware of.
As you may have seen with your eagle eye, there are lots of poster examples demonstrated in this video, some going all the way back to 1941 and others as recent as 2019 all utilising layers to establish visual hierarchy in various ways.
This is a 7-minute video, with lots of visual examples with countless hours of research.
I’m sure you can find fault, but I think we can look past a minor spelling mistake and appreciate the larger lesson for beginners here.
As a person who struggles with dyslexia, I’m surprised there are not more, it’s not my first and it won't be my last.
@@GarethDavidStudio my, what a pleasant response.