by Bunny Dojo » Wed Sep 23, 2015 10:16 pm
In almost all cases, it's a good idea to not have effects on top of your text (or logo) layers. If you look at retail covers, studio text and logos are solid colors (or consistently full-color, like the Warner Bros logo). There are professional print reasons for this that custom designers aren't bound by, of course, but it's also visually helpful to differentiate the artwork from the other aspects of the cover.
So, layering would be:
Text and Logos (Top)
Grain
Effects / Adjustments
Artwork Base (Bottom)
If the current amount of grain and the strength of the effect you used on the images are part of a message you're trying to convey about the movie, then go for it, but I'd definitely suggest not applying them to anything but the art itself.
In almost all cases, it's a good idea to not have effects on top of your text (or logo) layers. If you look at retail covers, studio text and logos are solid colors (or consistently full-color, like the Warner Bros logo). There are professional print reasons for this that custom designers aren't bound by, of course, but it's also visually helpful to differentiate the artwork from the other aspects of the cover.
So, layering would be:
[b]Text and Logos [/b] (Top)
[b]Grain
Effects / Adjustments
Artwork Base[/b] (Bottom)
If the current amount of grain and the strength of the effect you used on the images are part of a message you're trying to convey about the movie, then go for it, but I'd definitely suggest not applying them to anything but the art itself.