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Using Adobe InDesign: Brochure
So the first project of the spring semester at my college in my graphic design II class introduced us into Adobe InDesign.
Adobe InDesign is a layout program. It’s used to make posters, newspapers, brochures, ect. The text book for my class gave us exercise to make a very complex and highly typographic brochure. It was white, with black and pink lettering. But it was very messy! Words were overlapping, hanging off the edge of the pages, and they were slanted.
This exercise allowed the user to use pretty much all of the major functions in InDesign. It showed how to use guides to align everything, how to add and alter type, add images, use character settings and character styles, about master pages, the swatch panel, the stroke panel and more.
For my project, I’ve decided to make a summer soccer camp brochure – the idea from a very dear friend of mine whom helped me with the process. InDesign turned out to be a very fun program to play with! And with the help of Photoshop, the process of making a brochure was smooth and fun.
Disclaimer: The information in this brochure is fake but based off of actual brochure. I’ve made the camp up for this project!
This is the finished product! During critique, which my class has every time a project is due she had some pros and cons about this image:
Pros:
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- The images were evenly spaced
- The color of the font stuck out perfectly and the yellow highlighted text fitted well with the rest of the text and the over all color scheme.
- She liked how it faded from blue to green from one corner to the next
- I added a filter to the guy because it was in bad quality
- The star burst effect that is very light in the middle panel, in the background.
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Cons:
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- The background font on the front page and on the welcome page was slightly pixelated
- The text on the registration form was pixelated
- The font on the welcome page was a bit big for her liking.
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(Click on the image to view full size)
During critique, I was asked how I did all of this stuff because my classmates kept their color schemes simpler and didn’t have things blend like I did. So I will share with you how I did it an hopefully you’ll be able to follow along better then my classmates! haha
First off, the image is set to normal, US paper but landscape. I equipped the rulers (View – Show Rulers or Crt+R/Command+R) and I set a small border around the edges with the guides and to divide the papers by three sense this is a tri-fold brochure.
All images are on separate layers and the text section of text is on it’s own layer too!
For the images I have in my brochure, I took pictures of my friend playing soccer, but sense I’m horrible at action shots, they came out not in the best of quality. This is where Photoshop comes in! I selected around the figure using the pen tool (short cut P for pc and mac) then right clicked (option click for mac) and made a selection around him, deleted the unwanted space, then added the cutout artistic filter. (Filter – Artistic – Cutout) This was to make him look like a graphic.
After I arranged all the photos in to place (including the background soccer field image which I didn’t add a filter) I used a rainbow gradient from Photoshop and pulled it into InDesign, laid it over the entire image. (I also added a plain b/w gradient in the background in InDesign) I opened the effects window (Window – Effects) and set the blending mode to multiply.
There is also a star burst effect I made in Photoshop that I added to the background of the brochure and made it a light blue. That layer was set to luminosity.
Those are some basic things I did to make this brochure. My teacher says that it’s the small “polishes” of a design that really makes a difference to the over all look. I had a lot of fun working in InDesign and in Photoshop – the Adobe products are meant to used together and that’s what I suggest to everyone! Download the 30 day trails for the prodcuts and just play around with the features in each. You’ll have a lot of fun!









Good work! You’re right, most students don’t zap their brochures with colors despite the fact that they are told its a 4 color project, and even if they do, it’s very minimalistic. Of course, when I was in school the only tools we were working with were Photoshop, Illustrator and Pagemaker.