I was browsing through a design guide the other day about how to create "teeny-tiny brochures." I thought it might be interesting to try it out and this is what I came up with.
Obviously, I'm not a professional, but I thought it was a good idea.
The idea is that these are business card size, tri-fold. They'd provide just enough information to remind a person of who they talked to and what the organization was about. It would also include local contact information.
I thought the tri-fold was perfect because of our three missions (there was a bi-fold section in the guide).
Have you made something similar or something else unique for recruiting materials? Do you have any ideas that you thought might be neat? I'd be interested in seeing some of the things you've come up with.
Could you point out the guide so I rip you off borrow your idea? ;D
Looks great, but the blue and grey backgrounds will probably kill a printer cartridge in a hurry.
I wish NHQ would produce one that was mostly black and white and didn't require glossy or odd sized paper, so a small unit could run off 100 or so on their local inkjet printer for next to nothing and still have some decent looking materials...
Leave a white box on the back so that someone can write an email address, phone number or web URL in there with a pen, if need be.
Quote from: Al Sayre on March 09, 2009, 05:24:35 PM
Looks great, but the blue and grey backgrounds will probably kill a printer cartridge in a hurry.
I thought about that, but the resource mentioned why it is important to have the colors and why to incorporate them. I suppose that the grey could be removed in favor of white, but I don't think it would have the same impact. Plus, if you did that, you'd have to print some in magenta and yellow to use the rest of the cartridge :)
Quote from: NIN on March 09, 2009, 06:31:57 PM
Leave a white box on the back so that someone can write an email address, phone number or web URL in there with a pen, if need be.
I thought about that too. I just didn't put it there. I figured make it a standard label size white box so someone could mass produce the labels and stick them. But if you're printing them you can just add it on the original. (see new attachment)
It seems like you would have the Dates and what we did for the last two year.
You could print in Black ink on blue paper. A ream is only about $4 at the local office supply.
Quote from: Al Sayre on March 09, 2009, 09:15:57 PM
You could print in Black ink on blue paper. A ream is only about $4 at the local office supply.
How many is a ream?
500 sheets
Quote from: Al Sayre on March 09, 2009, 09:28:36 PM
500 sheets
WOOH!
Looks like I may have found some recruiting ideas haha ;D
Quote from: Al Sayre on March 09, 2009, 09:15:57 PM
You could print in Black ink on blue paper. A ream is only about $4 at the local office supply.
But then you lose all the white areas. Printers don't print white.
You use a light shade of blue paper and the "Black & White"settings on your printer, and halftone any photos.
I think the better idea would be to design the material for the printing that you were going to do. If I was printing on blue or gray, I wouldn't use white, yellow or any other lighter color.
I printed a few of these off at work on the color laser on card stock, then cut them out with a paper cutter and folded them. They actually look pretty decent. I might play with the typeface a bit, it's a very soft typeface and doesn't exactly command a presence.