15 Awesome Brochures - You gonna love them! |
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| Charlie B. Johnson | Comments 13 | |
Professional, innovative and catchy brochures always get a business noticed. To leave a lasting and notable impression, we all keep on bringing advancements to our marketing strategies. Just like business cards, brochures and booklets are a standard tool for promotion and advertising. These tiny books or magazines, which lay around in conference halls and waiting rooms, well present aims and motives of your business.
However, your brochures should be really creative and appealing, so one gets to grab it or it will be a waste. I researched the internet and found some creative brochures, which will definitely convince your customer to cross the line to make something out of ordinary.
Alba Product Brochure:
BabeRF:
Boston Museum Brochure:
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Selfpromo Brochure:
Westermann Brichure Design:
Urban Picnic:
Bibliotheque Design Brochure:
Brochure Design Book:
Altus:
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Suikerbosbrand Brochure:
Zipped Brochure:
Restaurant’s Identity Book:
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Unique Brochure Design:
Plaay Program:
I hope these creative brochure designs provided you some artistic inspiration. However, we are always looking for more beautiful or inspirational brochures to add to this list, so…Please send us your beautiful brochures and we will add them to our list.
Do let me know if any of these designs inspired you to come up with an innovative concept for your client’s brochure. By the way do you think most of the clients let designers experiment with their design works or they fear trying new concepts?
Your replies will be definite food for thought…Thanks!




















Manz | November 21st, 2008 at 4:17 am
Whoever got to work on “Altus” must have had a great time!
As for your question and clients - I think that most are more concerned with the bottom line these days! Hom much it will cost them is just as important as the concept and message at times! And as the economy is suffering, marketing budgets are cut and there goes alot of creative options to a designer. But I do think that alot of them want to see “a thought process” and consideration in what you present them.
I personally feel that regardless of your ‘production’ budget, that you can still be creative in your design - as proven by alot of these deisgns posted in this thread
I’d love to take your offer and share one of the brochure designs I worked on in 2008… well it was an event handbook - but they’re kind of similar…
Project: The Warren Centre Innovation Lecture.
2008 Speaker: Tristram Carfrae (features The Water Cube, Beijing - Olymic pool design).
http://www.warren.usyd.edu.au/front_page.html
The cover is what I’d like to share… the rest of the handbook is fairly generic. The client wanted a focus on the Water Cube - they loved the design