Designer & bike rider in British Columbia, Canada

Poster Design Process

Update (Feb. 8): Want your own copy of the Valentine’s Cabaret poster?
Download high-res tabloid-size PDF [10.9MB]
Download lo-res PDF [165KB]
Download jpeg [790KB]

Problem

Volunteer to design a poster for the Valentine’s Cabaret, a pub night and fundraiser organized by first-year students at the Emily Carr Institute. Timeline was about two weeks, budget around $0.

Concept

My first idea was to get a real heart and take a very detailed photograph of it. Lots of posters out there with Gray’s Anatomy-style heart drawings, or other love-related themes; our poster would be just like those but with a slightly catchier image. I wasn’t necessarily aiming to gross people out, but rather make a real heart look beautiful. Two other people, including the designer of the poster, Tobias, agreed it would be cool.

Process

I originally thought of getting a cow heart. A few butchers in the area said check out China Town. While we didn’t find cow hearts there, pig hearts were a-plenty if you asked for them.
valentine-process-001.jpg
Photographing the heart
We brought the heart back to school and booked the photodoc room equipped with permanent bulbs and a light table. I shot a series of the heart by itself, then we shot with a puddle of blood (made from corn syrup, red dye and a little milk). Sticky work. I sent a good 40 shots off to Tobias who came back a couple days later with three completed poster designs from which our little volunteer committee quickly chose one.
valentine-process-003.jpg
Heart shown in hand for sense of scale and fun.
The final step was printing. After a few proofs and some minor tweaking Tobias and I ran off 15 or so tabloid posters in black and white on the school laser printers.
We’d done some pricing and despite the lack of budget we agreed our own money would be well spent on at least one large colour print. Forty-five dollars and 24 hours later we had a 20×30 poster printed at a shop on Broadway called InPrint. Overall quality was kinda poor, esp. for that price. But it still works well, so we spray mounted it to foam core and chose the most visible, high traffic area on campus to display it.
valentine_poster.jpg
The final poster design by Tobias

Cost

heart $1.13
b&w tabloid posters x 30 x $0.25 $7.50
colour poster 20″x30″ $45.00

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Comments

10 Responses to “Poster Design Process”

  1. Lisa Avatar

    Reminds me of Biology 12 – except prettier. Nice work!

  2. Tyler Avatar
    Tyler

    I really like it. Good work.

  3. ginger Avatar

    Heyhey! I love those posters! Free love indeed.

  4. Dylan Avatar

    Duder, it was $1.13 for that heart?
    I am probably going to starty using hearts in my work now, I blame you.

  5. Shawn Avatar

    Can hearts come with accesories?

  6. JC Avatar

    You should auction off the colour poster and make a little money back!! Or better yet, donate the money to a worthy cause…Heart and Stroke Foundation, maybe? PETA? :p I love it, btw – really do!

  7. Jeff Werner Avatar

    JC: not a bad idea, auctioning off the poster. I’ll ask Tobias what he thinks (he was hoping to take it home himself; course if we made enough from the auction he could print another).

  8. Ezequiel Avatar
    Ezequiel

    Genial!!!

  9. DIRAN Avatar

    BAD WORK BUT ITS LOOK REAL…FUNNY BUT SIMPLE

  10. Mohammad Avatar
    Mohammad

    wow! amazing thinking man

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