What I have found from digipaks
I have found that with old school hip hop digipaks the colour scheme is dark and there aren't many vibrant colours. There is a message that the artist is trying to put across to the audience through the digipak without listening to it yet. There is usually some sort of imagery that represents the artist in the digipak or a photo of the artist himself keeping with the themes. All of the information on who made the digipak and copyright information is usually in small print so that the customer focuses on the other parts of the digipak that are designed to make the customer want to buy it. The small print is usually in a font that is boring to the customer so that they aren't interested in it. I have also found that the small print font colour is always white, so that it is readable on the typically dark background but doesn't pop compared to the main text therefore the focus is on the if the main text rather than the small print. The small print is usually tucked away from the main subject of the digipak image so that the customer isn't distracted. Parental advisory is always on the front cover of the digipak to warn parents that there is explicitness in the songs. This too is tucked away from the main image usually in a corner of the digipak. On the back of the digipak there are the tracks within the record displayed on the left.
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