2D final

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Poster Design

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Art is anything you can get away with -Marshal McLulan

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408 Parts Per Million The concetration of carbon dioxide CO2 in our atmotsphere, as of 2018, is the highest it has been in 3 million years.

Eleven percent of all global greenhouse gas emissions caused by humans are caused by desforestation comparable to emissions from all 11% of Emissions

The Amazon is a carbon storing powerhouse

Eleven percent of the world’s population is currently vulnerable to climate change impacts such as droughts, floods, heat waves,

In the Amazon, 1% of tree species sequester 50% of the region’s carbon.

Nature is an untapped solution.

2016 was the warmest year on record NASA and NOAA data show that grobal averages in 2016 were 1.78 degrees F (0.99 degrees C) warmer than the mid 20th century average. Seventeen of the 18 warmest years

Tropical forests are incredibly effective at storing carbon providing at least 30% of action needed to prevent the worst climate change scenerios. Yet nature based solutions only reveive only 2% of all

Save Nature Its Cheaper

Conserving ecosystems is often more cost-effective than human made interventions. In the Maldives, building a sea wall for coastal protection cost about US $2.2 billion. Even after 10 years of maintenence costs, it is still four times cheaper to preserve natural reef

Coastal ‘blue carbon’ ecosystems are Critical Just 0.7% of the world’s forests are coastal mangroves, yet they store up to 10 times as much carbon per hectare as tropical forests.

195 Nations on Board 195 Countries signed the 2015 Paris Agreement, agreeing to limit global warming and adapt to climate change, partly by protecting nature.

Price Tag: US$ 140 billion per year This is what it would take to make the changes humanity needs to adapt to a warming world. It may sound like a lot, but its less than 0.1% of global GDP


The Change is Real


WHY 1 4

2 408 parts per million. The concentration of carbon dioxide (CO2) in our atmosphere, as of 2018, is the highest it has been in 3 million years.

800 million people. Eleven percent of the world’s population is currently vulnerable to climate change impacts such as droughts, floods, heat waves, extreme weather events and sea-level rise.

3 Coastal ‘blue carbon’ ecosystems are critical. Just 0.7% of the world’s forests are coastal mangroves, yet they store up to 10 times as much carbon per hectare as tropical forests.

5 7

195 nations on board. 195 countries signed the 2015 Paris Agreement, agreeing to limit global warming and adapt to climate change, partly by protecting nature.

Nature is an untapped solution. Tropical forests are incredibly effective at storing carbon — providing at least 30% of action needed to prevent the worst climate change scenarios. Yet nature-based solutions only receive only 2% of all climate funding.

8 Save nature. It’s cheaper. Conserving ecosystems is often more cost-effective than human-made interventions. In the Maldives, building a sea wall for coastal protection cost about US$ 2.2 billion. Even after 10 years of maintenance costs, it is still four times cheaper to preserve the natural reef.

9

2016 was the warmest year on record. NASA and NOAA data show that global averages in 2016 were 1.78 degrees F (0.99 degrees C) warmer than the mid-20th century average. Seventeen of the 18 warmest years have occurred since 2000.

6 11% of emissions. Eleven percent of all global greenhouse gas emissions caused by humans are caused by deforestation comparable to the emissions from all of the cars and trucks on the planet.

The Amazon is a carbon-storing powerhouse. In the Amazon, 1% of tree species sequester 50% of the region’s carbon.

10 Price tag: US$ 140 billion per year. This is what it would take to make the changes humanity needs to adapt to a warming world. It may sound like a lot, but it’s less than 0.1% of global GDP.


Creative Repor t I was born in Whitter, California and have been influenced by Los Angeles culture and style. My work is typically modern and I love the use of neutral colors and geometrical shapes. I am inspired by the work of Chip Kidd, Gregory Crewdson and Saul Bass.

Influences Creative Repor t

CHIP KIDD

GREGORY

My Designs

Chip Kidd IS A CONTEMPOARY AMERICAN GRAPHIC DESIGNER, AUTHOR, AND EDITOR. HE IS MOST KNOWN FOR HIS ICONIC BOOK COVERS AND COMICS AS WELL. KIDD STARTED OFF AS AN ART DIRECTOR AT THE NEW YORK PUBLISHING HOUSE, AND ALSO DID ALOT OF FREELANCING BOOK COVERS. KIDD IS KNOWN FOR HAVING A HUMBLE ATTITUDE AND NEVER TAKES FULL CREDIT FOR HIS WORK, MAKING HIM A VERY PLEASANT DESIGNER TO

“My pictures must first be beautiful but that beauty is not enough. I strive to convey an underlying edge of anxiety, of isolation, of fear.” Creative Report Gregory Crewdson is an American photogropher that photographs American homes and neighborhoods. He graduated with an MFA in photogrophy from Yale. His photographs are staged and he uses production often used in motion picture films. His style is dark, dramatic, and often conveys sadness and feeling of life vs death.

CREWDSON


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