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First published as the Peacock Cookery Book in 1964, revised in 1973 and reprinted many times, this is from 1978. Cover photograph by Robert Golden.
The Fox Den logo for Briar Patch Bed and Breakfast in Middleburg, Virginia.
This stylized logo was created with the intention of matching their existing Briar Patch logo. By keeping the style similar in each logo it helped to form a cohesive look and branding between the two facilities.
To check out The Fox Den logo in action, visit Briar Patch’s website:
The Nigerian flag, font styling, and picture frames were all created from scratch--original custom flyer design.
Slave Unit is the #DIY music, graphic design and literature persona of Marco Abundo.
Music and merch here:
Lit here:
Thanks!
#pinoy #opm #graphicdesign #synthesizer
Packagings of the World is a packaging design archive showcasing the best, most interesting and creative packaging work worldwide. We will try to make the archive as digestible and as possible with less text, like they say, pictures speaks a thousand words!
2011- Part of a 3 part poster series showcasing work from underground artists turned graphic designers.
T-Shirt Design by Thurgood Marshal High School Students
Students were asked to design a t-shirt that was inspired by the word "highway". "Highway" was chosen as the subject of their design since this major cityscape feature is visible from the windows of their classroom. Each student designed their t-shirt using Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Illustrator. When they were finished, the designs were printed directly onto the shirts and heat set. The printing of the shirts was made possible by a generous donation of services by Mr. Willis.
Students at Thurgood Marshal found this project to be rewarding, as they proudly wore their shirts around campus for several days after the completion of the project. This has prompted many of the other students around campus to take an interest in industrial arts, as well as the creative arts.
T-Shirt Design by Thurgood Marshal High School Students
Students were asked to design a t-shirt that was inspired by the word "highway". "Highway" was chosen as the subject of their design since this major cityscape feature is visible from the windows of their classroom. Each student designed their t-shirt using Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Illustrator. When they were finished, the designs were printed directly onto the shirts and heat set. The printing of the shirts was made possible by a generous donation of services by Mr. Willis.
Students at Thurgood Marshal found this project to be rewarding, as they proudly wore their shirts around campus for several days after the completion of the project. This has prompted many of the other students around campus to take an interest in industrial arts, as well as the creative arts.
T-Shirt Design by Thurgood Marshal High School Students
Students were asked to design a t-shirt that was inspired by the word "highway". "Highway" was chosen as the subject of their design since this major cityscape feature is visible from the windows of their classroom. Each student designed their t-shirt using Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Illustrator. When they were finished, the designs were printed directly onto the shirts and heat set. The printing of the shirts was made possible by a generous donation of services by Mr. Willis.
Students at Thurgood Marshal found this project to be rewarding, as they proudly wore their shirts around campus for several days after the completion of the project. This has prompted many of the other students around campus to take an interest in industrial arts, as well as the creative arts.
T-Shirt Design by Thurgood Marshal High School Students
Students were asked to design a t-shirt that was inspired by the word "highway". "Highway" was chosen as the subject of their design since this major cityscape feature is visible from the windows of their classroom. Each student designed their t-shirt using Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Illustrator. When they were finished, the designs were printed directly onto the shirts and heat set. The printing of the shirts was made possible by a generous donation of services by Mr. Willis.
Students at Thurgood Marshal found this project to be rewarding, as they proudly wore their shirts around campus for several days after the completion of the project. This has prompted many of the other students around campus to take an interest in industrial arts, as well as the creative arts.
What you see isn't always what you get! Computer screens have a coarser resolution than the typeset-quality printers and the display differs accordingly. Each point size of the screen bitmap typeface is created separately. This is similar to letterpress fonts, where each point size is designed slightly differently to compensate for ink spread and other distortions resulting from the printing process. Low-resolution devices, such as dot-matrix printers, are the ultimate in WYSIWYG ('What You See Is What You Get'), for what you see on the computer screen is exactly what you get on the printout. But readers find it more difficult to decipher low-resolution typefaces on a printed page than they do on a computer screen, probably because the screen display is familiar, being no worse than everyday television.