swiss grids style poster
CATEGORY
promotional materials
CLIENT
John Abbott College
Project
As a student of the Graphic & Web Design program at John Abbott College, I was assigned the task of designing a poster advertising the program using a historical style of my choice. I chose the mid-century Swiss Grids style in which text is aligned to an underlying grid of varying proportions. The style celebrates the visual qualities of text and plays with scale and unusual layouts.
Process
I began by making a grid of 4×4. I chose the font Grantha Sangam MN bold for the headline text, a font that is clean, thin and balanced. I then inserted the necessary text into the bounds of the grid lines and began to play with scale. I pushed the scale further and experimented with obscuring sections of text by pushing them outside of the frame.
I was interested in how much text could be obscured and still remain legible. In the final version, I removed entire letters of words and played with spacing, breaking up words into chunks of letters.
Credits
Outdoor billboard mockup: designed by berlionemore_contributor / Freepik
On campus mockup: photo by mrsiraphol on Freepik
Interior brick wall mockup: designed by Free Mockup Zone
Credits
Outdoor billboard mockup: designed by berlionemore_contributor / Freepik
On campus mockup: photo by mrsiraphol on Freepik
Interior brick wall mockup: designed by Free Mockup Zone
swiss grids style poster
CATEGORY
promotional materials
CLIENT
John Abbott College
Project
As a student of the Graphic & Web Design program at John Abbott College, I was assigned the task of designing a poster advertising the program using a historical style of my choice. I chose the mid-century Swiss Grids style in which text is aligned to an underlying grid of varying proportions. The style celebrates the visual qualities of text and plays with scale and unusual layouts.
Process
I began by making a grid of 4×4. I chose the font Grantha Sangam MN bold for the headline text, a font that is clean, thin and balanced. I then inserted the necessary text into the bounds of the grid lines and began to play with scale. I pushed the scale further and experimented with obscuring sections of text by pushing them outside of the frame.
I was interested in how much text could be obscured and still remain legible. In the final version, I removed entire letters of words and played with spacing, breaking up words into chunks of letters.
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