Moving Rights “Packing the Car to Move” by Heather Kwak is licensed under CC BY-NC 4.0. Derivative of “Modern Couple Unpacking Car While Moving To A New Place” by Ketut Subiyanto on Pexels, licensed under CC0. I edited the image on Canva and “Article 13” came from the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Tags: human rights February 10, 2025 by Heather Kwak Student Posts 3
Hi Heather,
Your image is aesthetically pleasing to the viewer and makes great use of the rule of thirds, which is important in terms of composition. The font is very fitting and legible to the viewer, but also contrasts and compliments each other. Together the image and the text provide the context needed to understand the meaning of the article. Overall, your image choice along with the typography is great and you did a good job of making sure that the fonts compliment each other.
Awesome job, Heather!
Hi Heather. Great cropping selection from the original image. Your rule of thirds placement of the Article statement and choice of fonts is done very well. The font size and font selection are a supplementary contrast which I like very much. I can’t think of much constructive criticism to provide as you’ve chosen a great picture for Article 13. You could place the article in the top left third, but it wouldn’t make much of a difference for me. Great job!
Hi Heather! I think the fonts you chose offer an interesting contrast to the article you selected. I believe they create a more lighthearted tone, that is more matter-of-fact rather vs. strict policy. This can also be reflected in the background image you chose, as the woman packing is smiling in reference to freedom of movement. While the fonts work well together, the text underneath the Article 13 title appears too small–almost swallowed by the image. I would suggest shortening the text to include only one sentence from the Article and then making that text slightly larger. You could also opt to make the Article title a different color (such as pulling the yellow from between the trees), but I also understand that a darker background may only work well with very light colors such as plain white. Overall, great work.