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The Virginian-Pilot's photo of an aircraft carrier was almost as big as one.
Link is still kickin' it.
The State tried a tiny nameplate, like the
Chicago Sun-Times did yesterday.
The Providence Journal had gobs of mob mugs. And speaking of mugs, get a load of these two in the
Philadelphia Daily News.
A tighter crop would have given the
The Plain Dealer's over-the-nameplate promo more impact.
The Boston Globe captured an aging lion on the prowl.
The newspaper with the best front design today is the St. Louis Post-Dispatch for its high-impact MVP package.
Today's P-D is also an MVP: Most Visual Paper.
It cleverly told the story with just five letters – now that's economy! Shorter headlines with fewer letters have more impact than wordier ones – as long as the meaning is clear.
In contrast, the
SunSentinel's lead headline said "On the road" – which only works if you're Jack Kerouac and not trying to sell newspapers.
Send an email direct to Brass Tacks Design.
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