This first design is of a bottle of Dettol. As mentioned in my Postcard Analysis, I wanted to have a picture of an item which iconic to the movie. The bottle of Dettol is iconic as it was referred to during the film when Paul Bison says “...Dettol actually...“
This is similar to the first design as it has a sponge. The difference in this postcard is the title placement. I could experiment with the background colour but keep the font simple and clear.
This postcard design doesn’t push the boat out. I really like the idea of having a prop from the film, with “Job” written somewhere and the actor’s names. This postcard features a bucket which is another iconic item featured in the first scene of the film.
These six postcards evolve from that idea; the idea of a single iconic prop with a simple “Job” written code and the actor’s name. I used a very high-quality camera which gave me amazing results; better than I thought before I took the pictures. On the images of the bottle of Dettol I hadn’t planned that you can see every individual indent around the lid. However, it looks amazing and an unexpected beneficial factor.These two postcards are important screenshots from the film. They have the cast list and a quote from the film. This was a different approach to take however the screenshots quality is poor in comparison with the previous postcards.
I went for the simple route in this design and borrowed factors from the postcards I analysed in the Postcard Analysis post. This design for the back of the postcard is complicated and self-explanatory.
Final Design
These two pictures would be the final postcard designs. I feel having more than one design would work well and I couldn’t pick between the two.
Above, is the design for the back of the postcard. I followed the conventions like I said I would and I’m happy with the outcome.















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