You have six seconds to communicate your message. Make sure the most important info is prominent.
The swastika is both front and center and bigger than the word “takedown.”
This gives visual weight to the swastika, and it results in what appears to be a pro-nazi takedown of something.
What is a “takedown?” A protest? A fight? A verbal debate?
The word “protest” is very small
This makes it hard to read.
The word “protest” is overshadowed by the size of Musk doing the salute. This does three things:
Onlookers may miss the word entirely
It makes the act of protest look small and ineffective against the big, bad Nazis
It gives the impression that “this is what we’re doing,” not “this is what we’re protesting.”
Nowhere is it made obvious that this is an antifascist protest.
No swastikas with lines through them, etc.
The color palette is the one people associate with Nazis.
If you intend to use red and swastikas, you have to make it so glaringly obvious that this is antifascist, the dumbest person you can think of can get that gist by glancing at it. If that gets their interest, the other seconds need to be spent telling them what and where: Protest, Corpus Christi Tesla (or vice versa).
At that point, they’ll either want to know more, so they’ll look for specifics and actually read the poster, or they’ll wander off and think the fascists won’t come for them.
Hope that helps! And remember, this is a critique. It’s good-faith advice, but you are under no obligation to take any of it in part or in total.
Cool. Design could use some work. On a quick glance, it kinda looks pro-nazi.
Lol I guess I can see that. Figured it would be obvious, but maybe not. I plan to do more flyers.
If you want a couple pointers, I’m happy to critique. But only if you want
ETA: I have a background in design, specifically signage, so I know a little about it
Sure. I actually got this template from the Austin protest. I need to find something more subtle because tiktok wouldn’t let me post it.
You have six seconds to communicate your message. Make sure the most important info is prominent.
If you intend to use red and swastikas, you have to make it so glaringly obvious that this is antifascist, the dumbest person you can think of can get that gist by glancing at it. If that gets their interest, the other seconds need to be spent telling them what and where: Protest, Corpus Christi Tesla (or vice versa).
At that point, they’ll either want to know more, so they’ll look for specifics and actually read the poster, or they’ll wander off and think the fascists won’t come for them.
Hope that helps! And remember, this is a critique. It’s good-faith advice, but you are under no obligation to take any of it in part or in total.
It would be funny (in a way) if a handful of pro-nazis mistakenly showed up and then got the shit kicked out of them or something