After watching the music video, we asked the same people what they thought of our print work.
The first question was 'Do the front and back covers match the music video?'. The unanimous response was the CD covers did match the music video. This was the most important thing we needed to accomplish because we needed our products to be cohesive. The fact that they were all agreed that it was showed that we were successful.
The second question was 'Do you think the composition of the CD covers is aesthetically pleasing?'. The audience said that the CD covers look professional and had the features of a legitimate real life cover. The quality of the images, editing and font all contribute to making our CD cover look legitimate. Legitimacy is one of the main goals of making a successful CD cover so I'd say we were successful in this aspect.
The third question was 'Do you think the pictures we have chosen work well as the magazine adverts for the music video?'. The responses were positive, they liked how we split a frame into thirds with our main characters and the polaroid effect with our other magazine advert. However they thought that Kaden should be facing the other way to make our magazine advert abit more symmetrical. We didn't really think this was that big of a problem because of how minuscule this is.
The fourth and final question was 'Does all the print work work together as a cohesive media product with the music video?'. They said that our products were very good and eye-catching. They liked that there was a reoccurring theme throughout all our products so they all seem linked. However one said that the backgrounds for our inserts were quite jarring because the Twitter theme seemed too obscuring. Postmodernism was a high priority for us so we felt adding more intertextual references would cater to the largest audience (the internet) so that explains our heavy Twitter theme.