Preview

Create an Inspirational Vector Political Poster

Tutorial Details
  • Program: Illustrator
  • Difficulty: Intermediate
  • Completion Time: 1-2 hours
Download Source Files

Final Product What You'll Be Creating

This tutorial is inspired by Sheppard Fairey’s famous political poster series for the Obama campaign in the US. We’ll be showing you how to create this style of design. We’ll start with basic image editing techniques in Photoshop to get our guide layers setup, and then we’ll jump into Illustrator. You don’t need any fancy equipment to do this. I used an older mouse that still has the rubber ball.

Republished Tutorial

Every few weeks, we revisit some of our reader's favorite posts from throughout the history of the site. This tutorial was first published in January of 2008.

Editor’s Note: Vectortuts does not endorse any particular political belief in the publishing of this tutorial. Rather, this tutorial is focused on demonstrating a workflow for creating this interesting aesthetic effect.


Color Palette

Here is the color palette we’ll be using for this tutorial. There are four colors and a pattern. We’ll be using a mix of beige and light blue colors.


Step 1

For this effect it is best to have a portrait style picture, preferably of a subject that appears to be thinking, or looking off into the distance. I used this photo from iStockphoto.


Step 2

Once you have your image, you need to Open it in Photoshop and Crop it appropriately. The top of the image should be cropped to the top of your subject’s head, and the bottom should be a bit higher than chest height. The crop should have about a 2:1 ratio.


Step 3

Now we need to Posterize the image. Go to Image > Adjustments > Posterize. An appropriate posterization level for the look we are going for is 5.


Step 4

Now we’re going to create our guide layers for use in Illustrator. Start by duplicating your posterized layer, and name this new layer “Pattern Guide.” Then go to Image > Adjustments > Threshold. We’re going to slide our Point until we get something similar to below. We want it fairly dark, but still with a small amount of detail. Also, when using Threshold, it is best to use the Peaks that you see.


Step 5

Save this newly created layer as “patternguide.psd,” or something similar, as you’ll need it for Illustrator.


Step 6

We need to repeat Step 4 and Step 5 three more times. Each time apply a lower threshold, and save each new layer. Below are the settings I used, again notice the peaks.


Step 7

Before we start to outline our layers, we need to create the horizontal blue line pattern. To do this create a new Illustrator document. Give it a Height and Width of 4px. Then create a rectangle filled with our light blue color (#4F919F), and cover the top half of the canvas.


Step 8

Cover the bottom half with a rectangle filled with beige. Then Select All (Ctrl+A), and drag this over to our Swatches Palette. Congratulations you’ve made a pattern!


Step 9

Now we have to save this Swatch Set so we can use it in our poster we’re about to make. In the bottom left corner of our Swatches Window we’ll select Save Swatches from the Swatches Library Menu. Name it anything you want, I used “pattern.” You can now close this document, as we won’t need it anymore.


Step 10

Now that we have our guides and pattern created, it is time to create a new document in Illustrator. I used a canvas size of 700px by 850px.


Step 11

We’re going to start with our darkest guide layer, this will be our pattern layer. We’re going to outline the layer using the Pen Tool. So to start we’re going to go to File > Place and select our first guide layer into Illustrator. If you’ve been following verbatim, this file to place is called patternguide.psd.


Step 12

Let’s stop for a moment and discuss the proper use of the Pen Tool in Illustrator. This is one area where Illustrator handedly trumps Photoshop, but only if you use it correctly.

For any curve you basically have three clicks; two are anchor points, and the other is your curve point. You place your curve point at the highest point of your curve. You place the anchors at where the curve starts and ends.

One click is all that is needed when you are creating a curve. You can then change the curve points to curves after you have done the entire shape. To convert them use the Direct Selection Tool (A) and click on the Convert Selected Anchor Points to Smooth icon.

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Step 13

Before we can outline our first layer, we need to load our Pattern into the Swatches Library. To do this select Other Library from the Swatches Library Menu in the Swatches window. Then load the Swatches file you saved from Step 9.


Step 14

Okay, so back to outlining our first layer. Create a new layer below the file you just placed into Illustrator. This layer will hold our outline. We place it below because it is easier to see what we’re outlining that way.

Now we grab our Pen Tool, give it a Stroke of None, and a Fill of our pattern. Then start outlining all the black areas with the Pen Tool. The key is to average it out, don’t follow too closely to the guide layer. Just roughly outline, and don’t worry about our curves, as we’ll fix that after we create our outline. Note: This is the most tedious part of the process.


Step 15

You might have noticed that there are portions in the middle that are lighter that we just went right over with outlines. Well we’re going to fix that by outlining those using the same process. Fill those with our beige color, as shown below. We’ll do this on a new layer just above the pattern layer. After you’ve done that, you should have something similar to the following.


Step 16

Now we smooth out the shapes we just created. We want most of our points to be smooth, but I find it looks better if you leave a few the way they are. View the effect below from smoothing both the pattern and beige layer.

Note: I made this image out of order and the pattern was wrong, don’t worry about the color difference.


Step 17

Now we just do this same thing for each layer. Roughly outlining it, then outlining the highlights with the color immediately below it, and then smoothing out our outlines. The next layer should have solid light blue, followed by red, and then finally our dark blue.


Step 18

Okay, you should have something like the following. The tedious part is over. Now to make it look like a poster. First we’ll put a beige filled rectangle below all these layers, this will serve as our background.


Step 19

Now we’ll need to put our red and light blue halves in. We’re going to do this just above the beige rectangle layer. Use the Rectangle Tool to place the two rectangles.


Step 20

Our poster is looking pretty good. Let’s create the space needed to add the inspiring text at the bottom. You’ll probably have to enlarge your canvas area. To do this go to File > Document Setup. I added 300px onto mine.


Step 21

Now extend you beige rectangle so that it covers the new length of your canvas. Then create a new rectangle filled with our dark blue color. It should be a quarter the size of main subject.


Step 22

Time to add our inspiring word. We’ll use light blue for the font color, and we want to change the text settings so that the word fills most of the dark blue rectangle. To change the spacing between the characters, use the Character Menu. This is available to us when we are using the Text Tool. I used the font Myriad Pro.

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Step 23

Almost finished, we need to clean up our borders a little bit. First, select every layer, but your beige layer. Then create a Group (Ctrl+G). Then Vertically and Horizontally Align them to the artboard.


Step 24

Now we’re going to clean up the edges of our poster. Cover the layers that we grouped in a rectangle of any color. Then use the Pathfinder Tool, and select Subtract Shape From Area.


Conclusion

Way to go, we’re done! We managed to create a really awesome effect without needing a whole lot of artistic ability. We also learned how to efficiently use the Pen Tool, and a nice way to use Photoshop and Illustrator in tandem. This is my first tutorial, so I’m sure there will be questions. Feel free to ask in the comments, and I’ll try and answer as quickly as I can. Thanks!

  • Moe

    HELP please!
    hi. i have photoshop. but its not the same one like the one here. so itss reaally hard to follow this tutorial..
    is there anyway i could get the same one u used here?

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  • http://www.mcguiredesign.com Robert McGuire

    If anyone did make a really really good photoshop action that can be used for print quality, i’d be willing to pay a little bit for the Obama Photoshop Action script !

  • micah

    this is really amazing! i cant believe this is your first. how long have u been photoshopping? and also can u do a tutrial on how to make a zombie effect?

  • Nicholas

    I’m using photoshop CS3 and i can’t figure out how to drag the striped pattern and drop it into the swatches. it keeps telling me i can’t

    any advice?

    • Chenchun

      I have the same problem as you did. Can anyone help?

  • John the BAMFist

    Wow. Nice work, but alot of these responses are..well…idiotic.

    #1 Who cares if it could have been done differently, the tut is just a presentation of techniques

    #2 Quit wining about how you can’t follow a step by step tutorial and figure it out.

    And if you don’t have Illustrator, get a trial version, or a key-gen disc. Damn. Its like Ps/Ai pre-school response day.

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  • http://www.artisticmindsstudios.com/ Stephen Burroughs

    Thanks for the tut. I ended up doing it in PS, as I’m more familiar with it. But I think the end result turned out just as well. Have a look. :)

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/darkfiregt/3319836235/

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  • Meedz

    I love the technique, really, it’s awesome however I cannot seem to get it straight. It still doesn’t show any facial features when I’m done.. HELP!

  • PM

    Zack,

    I love your work. Can you please share your email address with me? I would like to contact you with regards to freelancing for a custom poster for me. Can pay through zazzle.com or other means.

  • bnonymous

    need help, what is the command for cropping in adobe illustrator? =x noob here..

  • Question

    I agree with Kesse, Nice tutorial BTW, could you please make an additional tutorial on how to do the ears / eyes / ties etc. Thanks for the tutorial great job! *thumbs up*

  • rb

    this is crap! I HAVE SAT FOR HOURS trying to do the same thing. u need to be more specific with the pen tool. i get stuck on the first guide. wtf? im a novice ai and ps user. and this isnt spoonfed

  • Dood

    I’ve got a way of doing this that is much, much easier. Will see about posting it.

  • http://2-0-1-9.deviantart.com/ Dominic

    Thank you for the great tutorial, this was exactly what I was looking for…

    here is my result: http://2-0-1-9.deviantart.com/art/The-Godfather-123111829

  • http:///undermilkwoodgallery.blogspot.com Tamixes

    Great tut! When I cam across your tut last year in June this style wasn’t known as ‘The Obama Style’ was it? Check this out http://tinyurl.com/orwrh5

  • Sanya

    I like the result, although streching the font was not a pro soéution.

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  • Bear

    you are great tutor, two thumbs up!!!

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  • http://www.tamil-united.blogspot.com proficient

    Its simple and great……I like and expect more like this..

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  • http://www.krlosmassare.wordpress.com/ krlosmassare

    muuuy buen trabajo…

  • reno463

    wow its amazing…

  • lishoy george

    i tried this…. it is fantastic….

  • Johnathan

    Hmm a little too advanced for the kids in our school, but great details in the tutorial. I was orignally looking for a simple poster design tool and tutorial like the ones on http://www.artskills.com

  • http://www.urban-muse.com Curt Anderson

    This tutorial is really nice and very helpful.

    I used this tutorial for some pointers and created the following image in Shepard Fairey’s Iconic style. Then I painted it in Gouache for a color and design course at the Academy of Art. I got an A!

    http://www.urban-muse.com/site/Urban-Muse_Home_files/JavierUrbanjpg.jpg

  • DirtDevil

    Very nice, but I did it with Angelina Jolie (with her picture, of course).
    Looks very good. THX.

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  • nikolai

    Thank you for your effort..

  • Sean

    Thanks for the tutorial!
    I stink at illustrator and this makes me feel like a loser.

  • http://ayeshaahmed.com Ayesha

    Completely breathtaking!

  • Edmond

    A similar, more detailed result is also achievable if you do all the pattern steps then vectorize them and put them on top of each other :) it also saves time

    • Edmond

      P.s.

      Great tutorial! Great walkthrough

  • http://www.clippingimages.com clippingimages

    Well explained tutorial. Nice final touch . thanks for sharing this nice tutorial.

  • Dang

    tutorial is hard to follow for beginners. steps missing in between that a beginner cannot follow.

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  • http://www.carlorizzante.com Carlo

    Very nice, easy and fast technique.
    Thanks :)

  • http://www.nineteenfortyone.com greg

    nice tutorial. here is yet another perhaps simpler way to achieve the same effect: http://www.nineteenfortyone.com/2009/09/vector-dogs/

  • evan saap

    nice tutorial, thanks

  • chinguun

    HEY THATS THE OBEY GIANT’s TECHNIK

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  • Josh

    the blue and red rectangles in step 19 are bleeding through my image – through the white spaces that were colored with the background beige. how can i stop this? am i missing something?

  • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4i5YM_V2lLw mauricio montenegro
  • http://www.photoshopclippingpath.us/ Arif@photoshopclippingpath.us

    Nice tutorial. Its helpful too

  • Cici

    okayy so we are doing this in our class and it is freaking hard!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!