27 Awesome Posters: The “Pin-able” and the Unparalleled
Is there anything better than a truly well-designed poster? If you’re listing off the obvious responses (Hello—food? Family? Love?), humor me for a minute. Imagine you’re scrolling or clicking through a website, maybe Dribbble or Pinterest, maybe the very site you’re reading right now, and BAM! The most delicious poster appears before you. You stop. You stare. There’s no looking away—not until your eyes have seen every inch of this work of art. And in that moment, you might say that there’s nothing better than the very poster before you.
You with me? If so, let’s take a little trip through some of the most pin-able poster designs floating around out there. We’ll end our journey with a look at some of the wall-worthy (and drool-worthy) posters that will be on display at the Seattle-Havana-Tehran Poster Show premiering this fall. The show—spearheaded and curated by Dan Smith, design director at Tether, in collaboration with international designers Pepe Menéndez of Havana and Iman Raad of Tehran—will feature more than 60 posters organized in a way that will call attention to the parallels between the seemingly dissimilar countries. How cool is that?
If you have a poster design of your own that you’re pretty proud of, remember to enter it into HOW’s Poster Design Awards. And stay tuned for some seriously epic poster design tips from this year’s judge, Allan Peters. He’s associate creative director at Target, poster design lover and winner of pretty much every poster award on the planet.
All right, let’s do this.
Awesome Posters from Xavier Esclusa Trias
Beautiful Aomame House Posters by Yuta Tsuchiya
Stunning Poster Design by Karen Kurycki
Cool Poster Design by Bartosz Szymkiewicz
Satoshi Ueda‘s Wall-Worthy Posters
Striking Posters by Michal Krasnopolski
Eye-Catching Poster Design from DKNG Studios
Intriguing Trio of Posters from the Seattle-Havana-Tehran Poster Show
Each poster featured in the Seattle-Havana-Tehran Poster Show represents its country’s local culture and design aesthetic, yet viewing the posters in triplets highlights unexpected similarities between the cities. To learn more and see more examples of what you can soon see in person, visit the exhibit site.
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