HCMA notebooks and sketch books page

HCMA notebooks and sketch books page, editorial, swiss, light

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Notebook application page combining dimensioned cover and spine specs with a 3D fan of cloth-bound books and two open-book mockups.

Summary

A notebook page that pairs a flat dimensioned spec for the cover, spine and heat-stamp positions with a 3D fan of the books in their full colour range and two open-book interior mockups.

Visual description

Cream page, left rail present: section label "2.9.4 Notebooks and sketch books" top-left, three copy blocks on the cloth binding, heat-stamped avatar, colour range and the highlight-orange ribbon; crescent mark and vertical Applications nav lower-left; hairline footer below. The right field is a white panel split into three zones. Left half: two overlaid flat technical layouts, "Sketch book 9 x 12" above "Notebook 6 x 8", each a thin-ruled outline with dotted dimension callouts, the spine carrying "curiosity applied" running vertically, "hcma.ca" at the foot, and the round avatar mark placed bottom-right with "Common positioning on both books" notes. Top-right: a 3D render fanning roughly a dozen cloth-bound books in a spectrum of warm and cool covers (rust, plum, red, cream, orange, teal, lavender) with their titled spines visible, a small dark avatar on the front book. Bottom-right: two open notebooks in powder blue, one showing a printed inside-cover detail panel, the other ruled cream pages, each with a small orange ribbon tail.

Key takeaway

Carrying one application across three views: a measured production spec, a colour-range hero render, and an interior detail shot. The fanned multi-colour render does the "you can have it in any of these" message in a single image, and a single highlight-orange ribbon becomes a recurring brand cue across an otherwise muted object.

Reuse notes

A good reference for merch, packaging or stationery pages where the object comes in a colour family and has interior or spine details worth showing. The fanned render is worth the production effort for any item sold in multiple finishes. Heavy on 3D rendering; a flat layout alone would lose the tactile, cloth-bound feel that is the point here.

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