Graphic Design

Using Images in Marketing and Design

Written by Matthew Simmons

We all have views on what constitutes great graphic design

But your marketing collateral is the foundation of your sales weaponry, and it must reflect you, your brand and products in the best possible light.

So, naturally, we would obviously recommend you have a professional marketing and design agency do it for you! But its interesting to understand some of the wrinkles that the professionals use day-in day-out.  But whatever route you choose, here’s some ideas about how to use images.

Worth a thousand words?

They say a picture is worth a thousand words – but in the ultra competitive world of marketing, where you have an instant to create an impression, to create the impact you need, your images need to be spot on in terms of resolution.

Good images cost money – whether you buy them in from a library or if you get them shot yourself. So you will need to use them as much as you can to maximise your investment. Never download anything from Google images for a number of reasons – copyright and resolution being 2 biggies.

Keep masters in a safe place

Always keep the the original, and its layers (if any), as a .PSD file before flattening, because if you need to edit it again, this will not be possible if you do not. As we used to with transparencies – work from a copy of it – always keep the original un-edited – these digital days, its so easy to click the wrong button and over-write the original.

Use the highest resolution for the media

Work in the highest resolution you can initially. You will need at least 300 dpi (dots per inch) for print and only 72 dpi for the web – its not worth trying to go higher on the web – higher resolutions are slow to load, negatively impact your SEO,  and won’t give a significantly better image on-screen.

When presented with an image that is too large for the area it needs to populate, then this should be reduced in Photoshop to the correct TIFF size as a CMYK (if working in 4 colour). Remember you must never increase the resolution size of the image more than 10% than the original as this will deteriorate the image and can cause pixelation.

Compression

JPEG is a commonly used method of compression for photographic images. The degree of compression can be adjusted, allowing a selectable tradeoff between storage size and image quality. JPEG typically achieves 10:1 compression with little perceptible loss in image quality. JPEG compression is the most is the most common format for storing and transmitting photographic images on the web.

This is not always necessary for PDF documents, as the size has no impact on the postscript, except the end size when you use them for print.

Check out this great post from Dan about all the image formats you might come across and explains them all in more detail.

Give us a call or drop us an email if you need help.
Author Matthew Simmons

Snap Marketing for graphic design, website design and marketing based in basingstoke hampshire

Interested in how we approach web design, marketing and print?


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