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I don't like how the wall texture turned out, but it does, at least, still look like a wall.
I'm also not happy with how the question mark looks, since it looks 2D. It is in fact a 3D object, but since the view is head on, it looks 2D.
Assets used:
As was amply demonstrated at the ideas stage, I can't draw for toffee. Here, then, are the required attributions for two pieces of clipart that I used:
I modified the giraffe picture slightly, so that the line thickness matched that of the elephant's. I also made the backgrounds transparent to allow them to be "stuck" to the doors.
The door was found in Sketchfab:
https://sketchfab.com/3d-models/door-with-frame-2f2f149f3ec44d658a02c1f924dfa449
Licence to use:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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I altered the geometry of the triangles to produce a taller, thinner looking "tree".
In keeping with the mathematical theme to this poster, I used only geometric shapes. For example, the tree base is a rhombus.
I thought about colouring the numbered triangles, but didn't wish to obscure the numbers, so decided against this. Instead, I coloured intermediary triangles to create the aesthetics of decorations. Yes, there is tinsel on there, and yes, all my "baubles" are triangular.
When I researched Karel Martens in Project 1, I was taken by his decision to create designs on materials that had already been used. To this end, I added background images akin to old dot matrix print outs, which seemed to fit the festive feel.
Assets used:
I found a 'Stack Exchange' post about creating printouts that looked like they were created using a dot matrix printer. I didn't have the time or energy to try to recreate their results, so took a copy of one of their sample outputs instead:
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My aim was to present a poster, from within a poster, but naturally sited - hence pasted to the side of a house.
The solitary figure, almost missable, is intentionally posed and placed. The poster, after all, carries the headline 'freedom', and what better display of freedom than a non-Aryan woman calmly sitting on a bench in public?
I couldn't quite nail the atmosphere (?) and the French styling is possibly lost too. It's good though, to have something to strive for next rather than exhausting yourself in the pursuit of perfection.
Assets used:
Liberté, 1944 (colour litho), Biais, Henri (20th century) / Private Collection / Bridgeman Images
© Kevin Warren - fibrocreativity (fc)