JimLiu-baoyu-skills/skills/baoyu-article-illustrator/references/styles/screen-print.md

2.6 KiB

screen-print

Bold poster art with limited colors, halftone textures, and symbolic storytelling

Design Aesthetic

Screen print / silkscreen aesthetic inspired by Mondo limited-edition posters and vintage concert prints. Flat color blocks, halftone dot patterns, bold silhouettes, and deliberate print imperfections. Conceptual and symbolic rather than literal — one iconic image tells the whole story. Perfect for opinion pieces, cultural commentary, and editorial content.

Background

  • Color: Off-Black (#121212) or Warm Cream (#F5E6D0)
  • Texture: Paper grain with subtle halftone dot overlay

Color Palette

Role Color Hex Usage
Background Off-Black #121212 Dark compositions
Background Alt Warm Cream #F5E6D0 Light compositions
Primary Burnt Orange #E8751A Main accent
Secondary Deep Teal #0A6E6E Contrast accent
Tertiary Crimson #C0392B Bold emphasis
Highlight Amber #F4A623 Small accents
Text Cream White #FAF3E0 On dark backgrounds

Duotone Pairs (choose ONE pair for high-impact compositions):

Pair Color A Color B Feel
Orange + Teal #E8751A #0A6E6E Cinematic, action
Red + Cream #C0392B #F5E6D0 Bold, classic
Blue + Gold #1A3A5C #D4A843 Prestigious, premium
Crimson + Navy #DC143C #0D1B2A Dramatic, noir

Rule: Use 2-5 colors maximum. Fewer colors = stronger impact.

Visual Elements

  • Bold silhouettes and symbolic shapes
  • Halftone dot patterns within color fills
  • Slight color layer misregistration (print offset effect)
  • Geometric framing (circles, arches, triangles)
  • Figure-ground inversion (negative space forms secondary image)
  • Stencil-cut edges, no outlines — shapes defined by color boundaries
  • Typography integrated as design element, not overlay
  • Vintage poster border treatments

Style Rules

Do

  • Limit to 2-5 flat colors
  • Use bold silhouettes over detailed rendering
  • Let negative space tell part of the story
  • Add halftone texture for authenticity
  • Use geometric composition (centered, symmetrical)
  • Reference vintage decades (60s/70s/80s) for era feel

Don't

  • Use photorealistic rendering or gradients
  • Add complex facial details (silhouettes preferred)
  • Mix too many visual elements (one focal point)
  • Use modern digital aesthetic
  • Create busy or cluttered compositions
  • Use more than 5 colors

Best For

Opinion/editorial articles, cultural commentary, philosophy and strategy, dramatic narratives, cinematic storytelling, music and entertainment, event announcements, bold branding content