Crosswords0 min ago
Making a Poster
6 Answers
I am rubbish on a computer but I need to make a poster for our Flower Clubs coffee morning. Has anyone got any suggestions for an idiots guide to making posters.Thanks in anticipation.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by giveup. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.MS Word can make reasonable posters but a decent desktop publishing program is far more flexible. If you've got Microsoft Publisher you could use that but this software is free and easy to use:
http://www.serif.com/...-publishing-software/
Posters are something that it's particularly useful for:
http://www.serif.com/...ing-software/posters/
(Simply use the templates).
Keep your posters simple, using the biggest font size possible. Don't use more than two fonts throughout the whole design. (Use an italicised form of one of those fonts, rather than a new font, if you want something to look a bit different). Remember that people are far more interested in knowing WHAT the event is (and WHEN & WHERE it will take place) than in who is organising it. So the words 'Coffee Morning' should be much bigger than 'Blogsbury District Flower Club'.
Just a practical point, with regard to displaying your posters:
Remember that the ink from an inkjet printer is water soluble. If your posters are to be displayed out in the open, or in windows where condensation can occur, they'll quickly become nothing more than an illegible mess. If you own a laminator then that provides an obvious solution to the problem. Otherwise you'll need to buy a cheap pack of plastic A4 'floppies'. When pinning your posters to noticeboards remember use the floppy upside down, with the opening at the bottom.
Chris
http://www.serif.com/...-publishing-software/
Posters are something that it's particularly useful for:
http://www.serif.com/...ing-software/posters/
(Simply use the templates).
Keep your posters simple, using the biggest font size possible. Don't use more than two fonts throughout the whole design. (Use an italicised form of one of those fonts, rather than a new font, if you want something to look a bit different). Remember that people are far more interested in knowing WHAT the event is (and WHEN & WHERE it will take place) than in who is organising it. So the words 'Coffee Morning' should be much bigger than 'Blogsbury District Flower Club'.
Just a practical point, with regard to displaying your posters:
Remember that the ink from an inkjet printer is water soluble. If your posters are to be displayed out in the open, or in windows where condensation can occur, they'll quickly become nothing more than an illegible mess. If you own a laminator then that provides an obvious solution to the problem. Otherwise you'll need to buy a cheap pack of plastic A4 'floppies'. When pinning your posters to noticeboards remember use the floppy upside down, with the opening at the bottom.
Chris
A long time ago when I was working for a major electronics company we had some networked printer/copiers. I can't remember the make but when you selected one to print to you could open up the preferences and it gave an option for poster printing.
It would scale your document up to the required size and print the correct number of A4 sheets with cropping marks. You had to assemble the result by hand but it was OK.
Does anyone know if there is any freeware printing utility that can do that?
It would scale your document up to the required size and print the correct number of A4 sheets with cropping marks. You had to assemble the result by hand but it was OK.
Does anyone know if there is any freeware printing utility that can do that?
For Scotman:
http://www.posteriza..../index.php?lang=en_US
http://www.posteriza..../index.php?lang=en_US
-- answer removed --