note: the misspelling of particular has been rectified on the final tiff file. While I considered leaving the phrase "on this particulard day", I decided in the end that it didn't make sense. Maybe, I'll include it in the postscript.
looking good. looking very good - it looks so polished! i like the plaid boxes midpage - they make the visual space much more appealing and complex. i mean, i clearly have no idea what i'm talking about and might as well say 'pretty pictures' for all i know about art. but anyway. nice work danno.
Thanks. And your opinion on art is as valid as anyone else's (especially when you say nice things about my art, as opposed to those bastards in the last post). I was a little concerned that the plaid going across the middle of the 2 pages would make the eye want to read across the whole thing from left to right, rather than reading down pg 47 and then starting up at the upper left corner of pg 48 - like normal Western culture reading style. But I think since I didn't carry the plaid pattern all the way through, since I included the normal borders, and since the lower right image on 47 is the same as the upper left on 48, that implies normal reading conventions enough for the reader to know where to go. Fortunately, not all of the page layouts require this much thought as to continuity. Quite a few do, but most don't.
3 comments:
note: the misspelling of particular has been rectified on the final tiff file. While I considered leaving the phrase "on this particulard day", I decided in the end that it didn't make sense. Maybe, I'll include it in the postscript.
looking good. looking very good - it looks so polished! i like the plaid boxes midpage - they make the visual space much more appealing and complex. i mean, i clearly have no idea what i'm talking about and might as well say 'pretty pictures' for all i know about art. but anyway. nice work danno.
Thanks. And your opinion on art is as valid as anyone else's (especially when you say nice things about my art, as opposed to those bastards in the last post). I was a little concerned that the plaid going across the middle of the 2 pages would make the eye want to read across the whole thing from left to right, rather than reading down pg 47 and then starting up at the upper left corner of pg 48 - like normal Western culture reading style. But I think since I didn't carry the plaid pattern all the way through, since I included the normal borders, and since the lower right image on 47 is the same as the upper left on 48, that implies normal reading conventions enough for the reader to know where to go. Fortunately, not all of the page layouts require this much thought as to continuity. Quite a few do, but most don't.
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