Friday, 29 September 2017

entire digipak process


Here is my front cover that I already completed in a previous post


Back cover process



First, I used one of the images I liked for the front cover as the back cover, but to make it different, I cropped the photo to digipak format and faded it out to the maximum for a much softer effect. 







Next, on the phonto app I applied all the tracklist on the  right hand side, which is where it usually goes other than the middle. For the tracklist i used the same font as the smaller text on my poster to keep the cohesion.

In my secondary research about digipak conventions, I noticed there is small text on the back of album covers, mentioning names of producers, social media links, barcodes and label copyrights, so I included those at the bottom of my back cover.

I googled a photo of a bar code and applied that in the bottom right for a professional look.



Finished back cover.



Spine and Inside of digipak process

 

On VSCO cam I got this google image of a brick wall to keep the theme going throughout the digipak, cropped it to the right size and then used the app MOLDIV to create this collage. I changed the frame sizes to make a digipak layout with a spine vertical section.

 

I added the artist name, album name and record company at a 95 degree angle and cropped that image before adding it for the spine photo. 


 

For the right side of the inside of the digipak, where the second CD goes, I kept it just image no text. For the left side I added the track list on the left of where the CD would be, so that it is still visible. 


Finished inside of digipak.


ENTIRE DIGIPAK LAYOUT




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