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Commemorative Stamps Conspiracy Theory Illustration Options

Test Prints

Due to the excessive need of an A3 printer, and the struggle it has proven to be at college with everyone needing the printer at the same time due to the deadline, I made the decision to purchase my own A3 printer to have at home – which makes the printing process miles easier! Because of this, I now have the ability to experiment with my designs as test prints before I use the expensive photo paper, and its miles easier to do with my printer because it offers a ‘draft’ printer setting which allows you to see if the sizing, scale and colour is right. I have placed my test prints for each project below:

My first set of test prints are focused on the Conspiracy Theory project. I was unsure on how I wanted to present my final designs within my portfolio, especially since the infographics are partnered up with an information page, so it made more sense to have these two designs on the same page. I first printed the designs in portrait and had the information page ontop of the infographic, but I wanted to try and get the designs to sit ontop of each other in when printed in landscape. This was unachievable, but I did managed to print the designs side by side when in landscape, which carried across the aethestic of a book really nicely. However, I made the decision to print the designs in portrait because it offers a larger representation of the final designs.

From here, I then started to see how I could layout my mockups. In total I have 6 mockups, and I knew I wasn’t going to be print one mockup per page and I also knew that it was unlikely that I could fit all 6 mockups on one page. This is where I tested the idea of 3 mockups per page, which reduces the amount of paper I have to use while clearly offering a large enough view of the designs mocked up as books.

With the Conspiracy Theory project fully printed, I moved on to the Commemorative Stamps. I first wanted to make sure that my designs could fit happily on one A3 sheet of paper as well as clearly showing the designs at a large scale as well as a true-to-size stamp scale. For this layout, I took to Adobe Illustrator and worked with a A3 size document. I decided that the easiest layout would have the three large scale designs taking up over 3/4 of the page when in portrait position and on top of each other with a small gap at the bottom of the page to sit the true-to-scale stamps designs next to each other. My main purpose of having a test print for the stamp project was to ensure that when printed, my accurate stamp sizes didn’t look out of proportion and I think that stamps, when printed, resemble the size of landscape commemorative stamps quite accurately.

I’m not really sure why I did a test print for the stamp mockups. I had already proven to myself that the 3 mockups on top of each other worked well with the Conspiracy Theory version, but I was on a role. And at least with this test print, I can make sure that the sizing is still correct for the actual stamps and the colour palette works for the overall print.

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Commemorative Stamps Illustration Options

Commemorative Stamps Mockups

With my illustrations finished and turned into stamps, I decided to take the next step and make mockups of my Commemorative Stamps. For this, we had two choices of potential mock ups, either a postcard, or a folder/presentation pack. I originally thought I would follow the latter, but I struggled to find a ‘postage stamp folder mockup’ and instead of wasting my time, I decided to quickly move onto a postcard mockup. The mockup I used can be find in the link I have embedded below:

However, before I could start my mockups, my fellow classmate pointed out in our group chat, that Royal Mail postcards follow a specific style. I was unaware of this, and it is only with a quick internet search that I soon learnt what my classmate was talking about. The Royal Mail postcards follow a different style when compared to a classic, everyday postcard and as we are ‘asked’ by the Royal Mail for these stamp designs, the mockups should be similar to their postcard styles.

Below I have placed examples of what the front and back of the Royal Mail postcards should look like. The front should hold the actual stamp, not the design for the stamp and for a clear difference of the stamp outline and the background, it seems to sit on a off-yellow/beige colour.

Royal Mail Star Wars Postcards Eight In a Set
1. Royal Mail Star Wars Postcard

As for the back of the stamp, this remains white. But instead of offering a section to write down the address with lines, the back is empty. Instead, the Royal Mail postcard holds their logo and a small description of the stamp design on the front of the postcard.

STAR WARSPostcards (Eight in a set) | Royal Mail
1. Royal Mail Back of Postcard

With the reference image above, I was able to recreate the Royal Mail postcard back on my own mockup, but the only aspect that I was missing, was the Royal Mail logo. For this, I just used Google, and asked for the ‘Royal Mail logo in black and white’ – I have sourced this logo at the end of my post and place a copy of it below:

Royal Mail Logo PNG Transparent & SVG Vector - Freebie Supply
2. Royal Mail Logo in Black and White

After taking into account the aesthetic of a true Royal Mail postcard, this was my final mockup outcome for my own stamps. I decided that I would take a slightly different approach and use a ‘Folded Postcard’ as the base of my mockup. I made this decision because it allows me to not only showcase both the stamp design clearly, the redesigned postcard back in the Royal Mail guidelines but also the stamp I have designed as an actual stamp in true size. The only part of the Royal Mail postcard aesthetic I couldn’t incoporate was the coloured background and this is only because the background is too similar of a colour for some areas of my designed stamp, especially since I made the decision to have my stamp designs reach from edge to edge. My mockups can be seen below:

Commemorative Stamp Mockups:


Sources

  1. STAR WARSPostcards (Eight in a set) | Royal Mail. 2020. STAR WARSPostcards (Eight in a set) | Royal Mail. [ONLINE] Available at: https://shop.royalmail.com/star-warstm-postcards-eight-in-the-set. [Accessed 10 December 2020].
  2. Freebie Supply. 2020. Royal Mail Logo PNG Transparent & SVG Vector – Freebie Supply. [ONLINE] Available at: https://freebiesupply.com/logos/royal-mail-logo/. [Accessed 10 December 2020].
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