- Joined
- Apr 1, 2021
A few basic things I learned from someone who did resumes a d desktop publishing back in the 90s and aughts,
There are basics to consider when it comes to readability - Fonts, contrast, proper bolding (or whatever effect)of headings, predictable indentations. I'm just naming what I remember, I'm not skilled in this dept
The colored ones , the faggy rainbow one and the money one, are hard to read.
Random thing used to correct all the time was people making flashy shit on a resume that was basically hard for boomers to read. Maybe because person is a nurse and also has some background in visual/optical health so really knew what aging people can see and what they struggle to see, and back then, boomers were essentially the hiring managers. So if your resume was too hard for the dinosaurs hiring to read, it got tossed.
I assume similar things go into consideration for Tracks, considering they have to be designed , essentially, for a family audience, or a children's audience, or an aging audience.
Tldr, even for a non design nerd, I can see problems with their printings, and even to me it seems like basic shit.
It's too bad we can't see any negative reviews of their orders online.
There are basics to consider when it comes to readability - Fonts, contrast, proper bolding (or whatever effect)of headings, predictable indentations. I'm just naming what I remember, I'm not skilled in this dept
The colored ones , the faggy rainbow one and the money one, are hard to read.
Random thing used to correct all the time was people making flashy shit on a resume that was basically hard for boomers to read. Maybe because person is a nurse and also has some background in visual/optical health so really knew what aging people can see and what they struggle to see, and back then, boomers were essentially the hiring managers. So if your resume was too hard for the dinosaurs hiring to read, it got tossed.
I assume similar things go into consideration for Tracks, considering they have to be designed , essentially, for a family audience, or a children's audience, or an aging audience.
Tldr, even for a non design nerd, I can see problems with their printings, and even to me it seems like basic shit.
It's too bad we can't see any negative reviews of their orders online.