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There were plenty of great photos today: The
San Francisco Chronicle caught a wave.
The Plain Dealer skated on thin ice. The
Rocky Mountain News showed pure joy.
The Boston Globe showed sorrow. The
Hartford Courant displayed the poignancy of deployment.
The New York Times went wild over Mario.
However, the type treatment
Stars & Stripes used on its Bush photo was unnecessarily large and obtrusive, ruining the contemplative mood of the headline.
The
SunSentinel's heads did little to sell it: "A step back from public life" isn't very specific and "Open Road" was virtually illegible. While the traffic photo was very telling, a bolder and more descriptive headline would have sold the story better.
The Augusta Chronicle really underplayed the Chambliss story.
Savannah did a bit better, but a tighter crop would have provided more impact. The
Ledger-Enquirer did better still.
It was a three-peat of meters in Chicago: the
Chicago Tribune and
Sun-Times were so-so, but
Redeye rocked.
The newspaper with the best front design today is The Orange County Register for using the metaphor of a gas gauge to deliver an image/type treatment that really worked.
Newspaper often fall down when creating illustrations such as these. But the Register succeed on all levels by providing a simple and compelling image, the most important facts via logos and dollar amounts, and a reasonable amount of text.
Send an email direct to Brass Tacks Design.
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