Hey everyone!
I am brand new to this great forum. I have been researching the chances of getting a custom deck printed at a decent quality, and decided to start designing my deck while I research the best route to print. I want to charge as little as possible for my deck if this BUCKET LIST idea gets of the ground. I was hesitant about posting my design on the internet for anyone to take, but I have faith and will show you guys my Back Design as of right now. PLEASE, honest and constructive criticism is needed
Thanks,
Austin
I'm going to be very honest, and none of this is meant as personal insult.
It's boring. Very boring. As a magician, I'd think you'd want a two-way back design, as well.
I've got very little design experience at all - the most I've done is retouch low-to-medium-res scanned images to correct damage done to the original. I could probably create a back like this, with the right tools, in about an afternoon. And that's taking my time. If someone's going to be paying $8, $10, $12 a pack, they want something that looks like some heart, soul and effort went into it. This has none of the above.
Minimal design isn't a bad thing, if there's a purpose behind it. This looks too simple yet not minimal.
Instead of trying to bang together a design, start thinking first about a theme. Designers get their inspiration from all over the place.
Lance Miller, Gargoyles - inspired by Gothic architecture
Lance Miller, Actuators - inspired by steampunk/gearpunk culture/imagery
Russ Kercheval, Brimstone - inspired by alchemy and horror imagery
Russ Kercheval, Bicycle Americana - inspired by the Old West
Paul Carpenter, Tendril - inspired by the jungles of Central America
Paul Carpenter, Aurum - inspired by the city of Venice, Italy
Ellusionist, Artifice - inspired by old-school poker rooms and con artists
What was (or for that matter, still is) the inspiration for your deck back design? What can you do to really convey that inspiration? From here, it looks like your inspiration is a particular typeface and one of the four pips in a standard deck...