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Three application panels showing thin Poppy and white line overlays drawn across portraits, including a social-card mock and a violet hero, with stroke-usage rules at left.
Summary
An overlay-strokes page: three side-by-side application panels show thin outline strokes (white circles, a poppy social-frame, a poppy hero line) layered over portraits as a small brand accent.
Visual description
Standard hairline header (section "Photography", subsection "Overlays", page 74). The left column holds "Overlays: Simple Strokes", copy on using strokes for a small Poppy accent, and a "Considerations" bullet list on stroke weight and avoiding focal points. The right two-thirds is three vertical panels. Panel one: an outdoor portrait with thin white concentric circle outlines overlaid. Panel two: a deep-violet field holding a rounded social-post mockup ("docusign" handle, a smiling portrait, a red angular outline frame, the name "United / Stefan Josephson", and a dot pager). Panel three: a bright violet field with a portrait card titled "Connected agreements." and a thin poppy line tracing into frame.
Key takeaway
Using a hairline outline stroke as the lightest possible brand signal over photography, and proving it across three contexts (raw photo, social card, hero) on one page. The poppy line that enters from a corner adds energy without covering the subject.
Reuse notes
A reference for graphic-device or overlay systems that need to stay subtle, and for showing one motif applied across editorial, social, and hero formats. The social-card and hero mockups are reusable layout snippets. Keep strokes off eyes and mouths per the page's own caveat.
From this deck: Docusign simple-stroke photo overlays
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