Friday, 10 December 2010

Katy Perry 'Teenage Dream' Digipak Example - Scarlett Giannotti

Katy Perry's 'Teenage Dream' Digipak consists of 17 tracks and is the third studio album by American singer-songwriter Katy Perry. It was released in the United States on August 24, 2010.
It’s Pop-Rock Genre has a Length of 58:24 minutes and was co-produced by record Label Capitol and Producers Ammo, Benny Blanco, Dr. Luke, Max Martin , Tricky Stewart, Stargate, Sandy Vee, Greg Wells.

The covers of the first two singles were photographed by Emma Summerton in April 2010, and three other pictures taken by the artist were released to promote the album in July. The official album cover was painted on canvas by Will Cotton and released on July 21 via live webstream, which shows Perry lying naked on clouds of cotton candy.
The album debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 chart, with first-week sales of 192,000 copies. In Canada, the album debuted at number one on the Canadian Albums Chart selling 26,000 copies. In Australia, the album also debuted at number one, as well as having been accredited with a Gold certification for sales of over 35,000 copies. In the UK Teenage Dream debuted at number one with sales of 54,176!
Here whole fun persona is Crazy, wacky and colourful which is portrayed by the packaging as a whole; even the CD inside has a sweet like design.
Parental Advisory is a message affixed by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) to audio and recordings in the United States containing excessive use of profane language and/or sexual references.

Originally, the sticker was a square with a dotted white line near the center of the sticker. The phrase "EXPLICIT LYRICS" was marked on the top, and "PARENTAL ADVISORY" on the bottom. The first incarnation of the logo, introduced in 1990, used a generic font and was used until late 1993, when it was redesigned with a white box in a black rectangle instead of a white bar between black bars. This continued until 1994 before the change which is still today. I researched this Information from Wikipedia.