Graphic Display Best Practices for Digital and Print Media
1. Define the purpose and audience
- Purpose: Clarify whether the display informs, persuades, or entertains.
- Audience: Tailor tone, complexity, and visual style to user age, expertise, and context.
2. Prioritize hierarchy and layout
- Visual hierarchy: Use size, weight, color, and placement to guide attention (headline → subhead → body).
- Grid systems: Use a consistent grid to align elements and create balance for both screen and print.
- White space: Give elements room to breathe; avoid clutter.
3. Typography fundamentals
- Limit typefaces: Use 1–2 families with distinct roles (heading vs body).
- Readability: Choose sizes and line lengths suited to medium (larger for screens, slightly smaller for print).
- Contrast: Ensure sufficient contrast between text and background for legibility.
4. Color and contrast
- Palette: Use a cohesive palette (primary, secondary, accents) and follow brand colors if applicable.
- Accessibility: Maintain WCAG contrast ratios for digital; for print, account for paper and ink differences.
- Color meaning: Consider cultural associations and color blindness—use patterns or labels when needed.
5. Imagery and graphics
- Resolution: Use high-resolution images for print (300 DPI) and optimized images for web (72–150 DPI, compressed).
- Consistency: Match illustration/photo style across assets.
- Clarity: Avoid overly complex visuals; simplify icons and charts for quick comprehension.
6. Responsive and scalable design
- Digital: Design with flexible layouts and scalable vector graphics (SVG) to adapt to varying screen sizes.
- Print: Create master layouts for key sizes and export high-resolution PDFs with proper bleed and crop marks.
- Scalability: Ensure logos and icons remain legible when scaled down.
7. Accessibility and inclusive design
- Alt text: Provide descriptive alt text for digital images.
- Readable fonts: Prefer generous spacing and clear letterforms.
- Multiple cues: Combine color with text or patterns to convey information.
8. Technical specs and file prep
- Color modes: Use RGB for digital, CMYK for print; convert and proof colors before finalizing.
- Bleed & margins: Include appropriate bleed (typically 3–5 mm) and safe margins in print files.
- Export settings: Export web assets in modern formats (WebP, optimized PNG/JPEG) and print in PDF/X standards when possible.
9. Testing and iteration
- Proofing: Print physical proofs and test on target devices and browsers.
- User feedback: Run quick usability tests or A/B tests for digital displays.
- Iterate: Refine based on performance metrics (engagement, readability).
10. Maintain brand consistency
- Style guide: Create and follow a visual style guide that documents colors, type, iconography, and layout rules.
- Templates: Use templates for repeatable pieces to ensure consistency and speed.
Quick checklist:
- Clear objective and audience defined
- Strong visual hierarchy and grid used
- Readable typography and sufficient contrast
- High-quality, consistent imagery
- Correct color mode and file specs for output
- Accessibility considered and tested
- Proofed across intended media
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