Friday, September 17, 2010
Another resource for movie posters
60 cool designs
I don't think all of the posters listed on this site are amazing but there are a few really great ones.
Great Movie Poster Resources
IMP Awards
50 Beautiful Movie Posters
22 Brilliant Photoshop Tutorials for Movie Poster Creation
There are some good ideas and helpful tips on this site. I think it will help you to understand the layers and what is possible by piecing together images. However, I don't think the composition is fantastic for a lot of the posters that are used as examples.
Wednesday, September 1, 2010
the sky's the limit.
Meaning
There is no apparent limit.
Origin
Some sources claim that 'the sky's the limit' was coined by Cervantes in Don Quixote. This appears to add to the list of popular fallacies about coinages attributed to Cervantes. For example, 'wild goose chase' and 'don't put all your eggs in one basket'. These phrases were introduced in early translations into English of Don Quixote which are now regarded by scholars as loose paraphrases of the original. None of these phrases appear in Cervantes' original text.
The latter two phrases given above are both quite old, i.e. 17th century. 'The sky's the limit' is much more recent. It originated at a time of optimism and progress - in the USA just before WWI. The earliest citation I can find is from the New York newspaper The Syracuse Herald, September 1911:
"Then good luck, and remember the sky's the limit."

"When the papers were arranged, the players got a new deck of cards, and there was not a word passed while the cards were being chuffled. The sky was to be the limit until the $50,000 was reached."
The adoption of the expression was no doubt influenced by the invention of the aeroplane. The phrase was picked up and used as the title of a Fred Astaire/Joan Leslie film at another time of intense interest in powered flight, in the middle of WWII - 1943.
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