<p>What color pops out to you? (it is for an advertisement)</p>
<p>Orange, red, yellow, any neon colors.</p>
<p>Primary colors for some reason.</p>
<p>Ok:) Thanks!</p>
<p>Orange…</p>
<p>Depends on what kind of advertisement it is. If its like a flier to put all over the place at school, make it something weird that people will notice, because personally, most fliers in the halls at my school I pay zero attention to. If all else fails, hot pink.</p>
<p>black</p>
<p>tan char</p>
<p>Any shade of gray will do :)</p>
<p>Neon colors.</p>
<p>Bright colors. Maybe contrasting but not clashing.</p>
<p>Black on yellow or white on red, like street signs. Or neon.</p>
<p>I suggest you do not use neon colors for your campaign poster as they are very gaudy.</p>
<p>You should use black and/or dark blue poster paper and paint on the text with the colors white + red, yellow, blue, green, or pink (at least three of these latter colors). Try to use the color white in the center of the poster for contrast to allow better reading.</p>
<p>Another campaign poster design technique is using the reverse: dark on light. Use white poster paper and insert a cartoon-like picture with varying bright colors outlined thickly in black. The text that accompanies it should be black, red, or blue.</p>
<p>This is just my two cents, considering I have helped many of my friends design their campaign posters during elections and I also create posters, fliers, etc. for clubs.</p>
<p>Wow:) Thanks TRUFFLIEPUFF i didn’t think about neon color that way until you brought it up and i agree with you too.</p>
<p>an orange-blue contrast.</p>
<p>Light colors on dark…</p>
<p>Probably purple. But only because it’s my favorite color and isn’t used very often.</p>
<p>Oh and I wouldn’t go with neon. Bright would grab my attention but might take away from the content of the advertisement itself.</p>