This presentation shows the stages of how we created our digipak panels.
The first images shown are the images we took on our photo shoot which we have edited on photoshop.
In this image we had the problem of having an object at the back of the image and we wanted to use this image as the position was just right, so what we did was use a brush tool on photoshop which takes the colour of the background and blends in with another colour making a shade of colour.
This is the image we chose for our front cover.
We first uploaded the images on to photoshop where we edited them by fading out spots on the face of our lead as well as blending in the ackground colours because a few visible objects were not hidden.
Once editing our images we put them into the panels where they will go on a digipak and the turned the inside images of the digipak upside down because when the digipak is folded in half the images need to be facing the right way up.
We then decided to change the front cover to a differnt photo because we had already used this photo for our magazine advert as well as changing the font of the writing. After doing that we did the back cover by opening up the light pictures we took in the studio, in the dark, where we have spelt DOMINO and then have the tracklist over the top. We then got stuck on what design we wanted to do for the disc panel and then we saw a back cab before college which had names of places in london scattered everywhere going diagnolly and vertically, so we decided to do a similar design but had the word DOMINO going in circles like the CD as well as including the barcode and the music stores where the CD will be available at.
FINISHED DIGIPAK
We added a last minute addition by putting a thank you letter to the fans on one of the inside panels.
This was the image that we started to use for the front cover of our digipak.
On this image we had to get rid of the spots on her face so we used a blemish brush where you keep clicking on the parts of the face until the spots fade away and blend in with the rest of the skin colour.