This week was the continuation and conclusion of last Saturday's introduction to basic image production with Adobe products. Having covered simple Photoshop techniques last week, today we focused on using Illustrator and InDesign to produce text and compose a complete poster, respectively. Below is some of the work I produced today; my poster is based on an idea for a fictional universe I've been working on, and will perhaps more fully realise in the future in some format.
Fig. 1: Adobe Illustrator, Text
Illustrator was used to explore various ways of producing dynamic typography, including writing along a drawn path, stretching based on anchor points and colouring. I experimented using each of those techniques, choosing to work with a font that struck the ever-important balance of being attractive and elaborate enough without being tacky. My final product is second from the top; I decided to keep it centered and on a straight line because it best fitted the composition of my Photoshopped image, which can be seen below.
I couldn't decide whether or not I preferred the image with or without the extra detail in the logo, so I created two images and have saved them both. The black art was created by Alex Burnell, an animator friend of mine, after a discussion which prompted the idea for Lord of the Sky and Giants. I replaced the background with an edited cloud backdrop, to better fit the font colour, and removed the outside detail from the original image (and much of the interior detail in Fig. 3) before importing the images into InDesign to combine them with my text.
Figs. 4 & 5: InDesign Posters
Here are the two final posters I produced. Again, I left two versions, since I wasn't sure which I preferred. I think perhaps, had I had more time, I would've experimented more with the placement of the text and potentially added some more (perhaps to fill the gap in the circle in Fig. 5), but overall I'm happy with how they turned out, especially as I am so new to the software we used.





