During the process of making our digipak, we asked multiple people for feedback and gained some constructive criticism on the photos we chose to represent our artist on the digipak. Receiving feedback on the aesthetic, colour scheme and overall vibe of the photos helped us to gage what we wanted the final digipak outcome to be.
While doing this, we ended up changing a lot of the photos that we had originally chose for the digipack for the front cover, back cover, inside and inside back cover. This is because, after receiving feedback, we thought it was best to have the artist wearing the same clothes in each photo as well as changing some of the images so that together, the whole digipak looks more coherent in terms of the colour scheme. After looking at these pictures together we realized that they didn't seem to work and needed to have a more coherent colour palette to help it look like it's meant to be a collective set and less individual or divided.
Initial
pictures we chose:
After we decided that it would be more successful having the model on the digipak wearing the same outfit, we edited more photos of the model wearing the plaid blazer so that the lighting in each image was similar (this was done by changing the hues of the images to more orange tones).
In my next blog post about our digipak designs, I will post the final produce that as a group, we are all happy with; it will include all the titles in fonts that we think will suit out artist best.
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