actual graphic designers, plaese to help a wannabe
The_Hook_Up
8,182 Posts
I tried my bestest to make this look old...but it still has a heavy flavor of computer, so I was wondering if you pro dudes could hip me to something more I could do to take the digital aftertaste out...
Comments
You probably just need to step away from it for awhile & come back with new eyes.
Whatever you have to do to it, it ain't much.
Edit: the centerhole needs cleaning up.
IMG SRC=http://img256.imageshack.us/img256/3125/radioflyav1.gif>
The only part I would change is maybe touch up inside top of the ring (right underneath "Memphis") on the white background that is a little smudged over, you might have to get down and dirty in the zoom, but it will look more solid...
Not that I am pro designer, and it looks really good other wise, cool idea for a flyer...
Are you rocking all 45s all night?
Peace
Zeb
http://www.soulstrut.com/ubbthreads/showflat.php?Cat=0&Number=854136&an=0&page=0#Post854136
But I dig how you put the aging on yours.
The worn effects look good to me, very authentic, and the ornate type at the top is very nice!
True. Good insight. Also consider your analog options, as in printing it out un-effected messing it up, and then scanning it.
1. Choose a different typeface. Whatever italic face you're using there is waaaay too current and you'd never see it on a funk 45. Stick with Helvetica.
2. The WEDNESDAY cluster of type on the left is too close to the borders. shrink it so it can breathe a little bit better.
3. Try putting a very very slight blur on all of your type. This will help mesh it in with the label and look to be a part of the whole thing, VS floating type on top of a record label.
from wikipedia:
I>Trebuchet MS is a sans-serif typeface designed by Vincent Connare for the Microsoft Corporation in B>1996[/b]. It is named after the trebuchet, a medieval siege engine.[/i]
Yo, I ain't buyin no 96 funk 45... you were probably going for that hotpie & candy look
I blurred the shit out of the type already...I blurred it again and it seemed too blurry. Should I just blur the edges of the letters with the blur tool and a not the whole layer with the blur filter?
The label actually started with a scan of a Lanor label, I had a hard time rubber stamping the LANOR out, so I just deleted everything (except 45 rpm) and thought I would go for a Memphis label look, so I used the Bandstand U.S.A. label as a model...
I don't know anybody that would check a show/event with such suspect font selection in the flyer!
Shit, my lil' nephew just walked by and took a look at the computer screen and blurted out "that font look hella 90's, that's not an actual record from the 60's!" and walked away in a huff.