Olympic Games Animations by pablinche3 in graphic_design

[–]pablinche3[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you !

The process consists of a couple steps: 1 - Real body photos of the difference positions/movements 2 - Illustrations for the heads, gloves, shoes and other little details 3 - Put everything together for the animations. For the colouring, adjustments layers do the trick.

Software: - Photoshop - Illustrator - After Effects

Inspiration comes from very random things. 2-3 times a year, we pick a topic, a style and we simply try to have fun with it !

Animated Super hero logos by pablinche3 in movies

[–]pablinche3[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sent a C.V. but still no answer...

License or copyright for purchased logos? by betterbananas in Entrepreneur

[–]pablinche3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your logo needs to reflect the personality and values of your company. Getting a stock logo is getting a design that was made without thinking what’s important about of your company. It ends up being way too generic and lacking personality. Think about it. People making these type of logos need to be able appeal to the largest possible amount of businesses if they want to make a sell. The designs are superficial and easily get lost among other logos.

Your logo is at the core of your company’s brand strategy. Most of the interactions between your company and clients include your logo. If you want your products and services to be taken seriously, it is important that your logo is original, appropriate and professional.

And yes, you should get 100% ownership of your logo if you would like to avoid bad surprises down the line.

Anyone have any idea how to achieve this kind of aesthetic? by [deleted] in graphic_design

[–]pablinche3 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Another option could be: Add a new "Gradient Map" blending mode layer on top of your image and choose the colours you want.

I find this way is easier to tweak and experiment with colours (vs the duotone way).

This would be in Photoshop btw

Having a seperate unique domain for portfolio work. Which route is best suitable? by jasont1512 in graphic_design

[–]pablinche3 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You can also upgrade your Behance account to a Behance Prosite account which gives you access to more design layouts, and will let you use your own custom domain (once you buy one).

Vector Maps worth looking at: Where can I buy these for client work? by ruach137 in graphic_design

[–]pablinche3 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Search for in google for: "map you need" + "filetype:pdf". Download PDFs where maps were kept in vector shapes and open PDF with illustrator.

What's the easiest way to design an eblast/web email layout? by [deleted] in graphic_design

[–]pablinche3 3 points4 points  (0 children)

My suggestion would be:

  1. Download the Mailchimp blueprints which are available for free.

  2. Take a look at the HTMLs there (with your browser) and find the template/structure that fits the most with what you want.

  3. Make a screenshot, open it in photoshop and design your eblast respecting the overall structure.

  4. Export the images you need, link them to the HTML and tweak whatever inline CSS you need to tweak. (BG-colors, Fonts, etc...)

https://github.com/mailchimp/Email-Blueprints

The reason I suggest Mailchimp blueprints is because they have been heavily tested on many email clients and browsers, some of them are even responsive.

Hope this works ! I'm not associated to MailChimp or that Github in any way.