#me listening to cardigan in march: I Must Make This A Poster
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royalsofeloda ¡ 3 years ago
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How do you do all these poster? any tips?
hi anon !!! im sososo sorry this took me forever to answer 💔 also sorry this got a lil long i’d put it under a cut but i’m on mobile :/
i edited every poster differently but for 1, 2 and 5 i loosely followed this tutorial by @/ratboysims ,,, unfortunately the original post is deleted ?i think? but the link is a reblog of it ☹️ feel free to send another ask if you can’t get access to the tutorial i could try to explain it :D
tiiiiips hmmmmm let me think
• i love to visualize lyrics so that was my biggest inspiration for all the poses and backdrops and stuff so maybe find a song with lyrics you love and Imagine it 💆🏽‍♀️ this is literally how i’ve come up with All Of Chapter Three ,,, just a bunch of song lyrics made into lil plot lines
• i consider myself Adequate in photoshop 🥴 but these posters definitely required me to look up some tutorials and try New things to get the result i wanted so i guess i would say Trust The Process and get out of your editing comfort zone !!
• i got all the fonts i used from dafont.com ,, they have it organized into categories so it was very easy to find what i was looking for :)
i can’t think of anything else but let me know if you have any other questions i’d be happy to answer them <3
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lindyhunt ¡ 7 years ago
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50 Years After Mai ’68 the Revolution Is Still Going Strong
There is an enigmatic saying I encountered when I first came to Paris that confounded me and still does to this day: “Sous les pavés, la plage.” In English, it sounds like early Google Translatese “Beneath the cobblestones lies the beach.” What it really means, though, is that when you rise up against the powers that be, you make a kind of paradise.
Each speckled grey cobblestone of Paris is a silent and symbolic revolt. The last time these granite cubes were lobbed at the riot police in any great number was on May 10, 1968. Some 20,000 striking students marched over them through clouds of tear gas to the Sorbonne, flipping cars, throwing Molotov cocktails and thrusting fists and placards in the air. For nearly three weeks, the students raised havoc and ultimately enlisted 10 million French workers for their cause. At the end of the month, President Charles de Gaulle put his foot down. “Enough is enough,” he said, or, rather, “Ça suffit!” And then, like the last spiralling, farting deflation of a popped party balloon, it was over. The utopia that the protesters had hoped to dredge up from beneath the stones turned out to be just sand after all.
The 77-year-old de Gaulle went on to sweep the June elections—and with them every crumb of teen-rebel spirit that year. But even he couldn’t entirely snuff out the sparkle of that uprising a half-century ago. Now its embers have reignited.
Alessandro Michele feted Mai 68 in Gucci’s Pre-Fall ad campaign. Bespectacled kids played hooky in shearling-lined jean jackets and Gucci-stripe cable-knit cardigans. Dior plastered its runway with Mai 68 posters and kicked off the show with a sweater tantrum: a black-and-white knit that bellowed “C’est non, non, non et non.” Sonia Rykiel, which has the truest revolutionary claim (the late founder started her label in 1968), offered the Pavé Parisien, a cobblestone-shaped handbag that someone like Emma González might find useful in a pinch.
Le Pavé comes in 8 shades of leather. Discover “Le Pavé Parisien” online & in stores #bag #PavéParisien
A post shared by Sonia Rykiel (@soniarykiel) on May 1, 2018 at 2:34am PDT
The “soixante-huitard” anniversary is the wellspring for this season’s radical-chic politics. And the fashion houses have repackaged it with such breathtaking cynicism that it seems like there’s no idealism left from that far-off time. But Mai 68 has reincarnated itself.
Like their Gallic cousins 50 years ago, Amer­ican kids, too, have taken to the streets. Only, with the number of school shootings, American kids are demanding stricter gun control. “The first impact of the recent gun violence and school-violence protests is that major American retailers are changing their practice of what they sell and who they sell it to,” says Jennifer Earl, a sociologist and professor at the University of Arizona who specializes in youth activism. “There is a different conversation now about the role of private companies in gun control.”
Fashion agitprop is one of many bullhorns for #NeverAgain. Millie Bobby Brown got up onstage at the Kids’ Choice Awards wearing a Calvin Klein jean shirt with “Never Again” embroidered above the front pocket. On the back were the names of the 17 people who died in the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. The #NeverAgain hashtag suggests light-years of sophistication between March for Our Lives and the naiveté of Mai 68. Yet what’s the difference, really, between churning out anti-NRA memes and silkscreening left-wing posters? Whether virtual or analogue, the message is the same, which is that the grown-ups have fumbled and the kids must pick up the ball. But how?
Thank you to all the fans who voted for me and for Stranger Things at Nickelodeon Kids Choice Awards today. A big 🙏🏻 also to my friends at Calvin Klein for being such a champion of important causes and efforts to create positivity in this world. @emmazelaznog @cameron_kasky @davidmileshogg @alexanderblakewind @jackiecorin @nickelodeon @marchforourlives #kca #marchforourlives #neveragain
A post shared by MBB (@milliebobbybrown) on Mar 24, 2018 at 6:38pm PDT
Mai 68 eventually modernized the French: Its mythic cobblestones paved the way for feminism and the lowering of the voting age from 21 to 18, but that didn’t happen until the mid-’70s—many of the Mai 68 students were too young to vote in the June elections. #NeverAgain knows that marches, memes and fashion agitprop moments are nothing if they don’t ultimately turn into votes. If the adults are to listen to them about gun control, or possibly even other issues like climate change and social justice, it will be at the polling booth. The kids are digging hard for the sand beneath the asphalt. If they’re smart about it, it’s quite possible they may find their beach.
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