Graphic Designer Spends Entire Year Creating a New Minimalist Movie Poster Every Day

Remake Of Castaway Movie Poster

When graphic designer Peter Majarich rang in 2016, he opted for a particularly unique New Year’s resolution: to design a new movie poster each day.

Majarich views the project—aptly titled A Movie Poster A Day—as both an artistic endeavor and a personal challenge. The cinematic series emerged as a way to cohesively and creatively combine his interest in pop culture with his tendency toward a modern and minimalist aesthetic. While his reimagined and recreated posters are stylistically unique and his concepts are inventive, he makes sure that every homage honors the film’s original intentions. “Each poster aims to be an alternative take on the original theatrical release poster,” he explains, “while still staying true to the movie’s concepts.”

In addition to executing A Movie Poster A Day, Majarich also runs Craft and Graft, a Sydney-based design studio. Select signed posters are available to purchase through the stylish shop, where you can also catch a sneak-peek of his other current projects.

Titanic Movie Poster Reimagined With Minimal Aesthetic

Original Intention Honored In New Movie Poster For Film Forest Gump

Jaws Movie Poster Redesigned With Minimal Aesthetic

Artistic Endeavor To Reimagine Superman Movie Poster

Personal Challenge Recreates Cinematic Poster Of Jurassic Park

1984 Movie Poster Reimagined

The Wolf Of Wall Street Remake Of Movie Poster

Movie Poster A Day Personal Challenge

40 Year Old Virgin Movie Poster Remake

Movie Poster A Day Challenge

New Movie Poster Honors Film's Original Intent

Cinematic Poster Of The Karate Kid Reimagined

Lost In Translation Redesigned Movie Poster

Personal Challenge To Recreate Movie Posters

Finding Nemo Movie Poster Meets Minimalist Aesthetics

Artistic Endeavor To Recreate Movie Posters

Redesigned Movie Poster Pays Homage To The Fantastic Mr. Fox

Fifty First Dates Recreated Movie Poster

Reimagined Cinematic Poster Of Rocky

Pete Majarich: InstagramTumblr | Facebook | BehanceShop 
via [This isn't Happiness]

All images via Pete Majarich.

Kelly Richman-Abdou

Kelly Richman-Abdou is a Contributing Writer at My Modern Met. An art historian living in Paris, Kelly was born and raised in San Francisco and holds a BA in Art History from the University of San Francisco and an MA in Art and Museum Studies from Georgetown University. When she’s not writing, you can find Kelly wandering around Paris, whether she’s leading a tour (as a guide, she has been interviewed by BBC World News America and France 24) or simply taking a stroll with her husband and two tiny daughters.
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