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A do-and-dont rule slide showing Headline Layout A paired with imagery as a correct two-up, beside a red-X crossed example warning it never stands alone.
Summary
A pairing rule: Headline Layout A (an orange "New Generation." poster) must always sit beside a second imagery layout. A red-X marks the same poster used alone as forbidden.
Visual description
White page with the standard running header and footer. A left-aligned "2-UP LAYOUT PAIRING" heading sits above body copy stating that Headline Layout A should always pair with a second imagery or artwork layout, bolded "Headline Layout A should never show up alone." The correct example pairs an orange "New Generation." typographic poster with a portrait of an athlete in white against marble (a green "New Rule Breakers." lockup). To the right, a "Don't" note labels a magenta-on-green "New Generation." poster shown solo, struck through with a bold red X.
Key takeaway
The two-up pairing rule itself, that a pure-type panel must always be married to an image panel, plus the clean correct/incorrect layout with a single red X to flag the violation. It teaches a relationship, not just a single asset.
Reuse notes
A reusable do-and-dont template for any system where a typographic unit and a photographic unit are meant to travel together. The red-X-over-real-art convention is a compact, unambiguous "never do this" device for guideline decks.
From this deck: Two-up system pairing rules
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