The main artwork is a vibrant collage featuring iconic imagery from the band's discography. Prominently displayed are five distinct sections: the psychedelic, densely populated crowd of the "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" cover; the bright, surreal cartoon aesthetic of "Yellow Submarine"; the colorful, swirling, and star-shaped "Magical Mystery Tour" cover; the world-famous zebra crossing photograph from "Abbey Road"; and the minimalist "Let It Be" grid featuring four close-up portraits of the band members.
The layout is set against a backdrop that suggests a stylized Union Jack, with muted red, white, and blue tones. Scattered around the main album artworks are small, colored, postage-stamp-style portraits of each member. The overall composition is a dynamic, layered arrangement that highlights the evolution of the band’s visual branding throughout the late 1960s.
The color palette is a high-contrast blend of saturated primary colors—vibrant yellows, reds, and blues from the psychedelic album covers—contrasted against the naturalistic, muted tones of the street photography and the clean, stark white of the minimalist album elements. The style shifts between fine art illustration, staged band photography, and documentary-style urban snapshots, creating a comprehensive visual tribute to the band's history. Several small black star icons with numerical labels are scattered across the scene, adding a graphic, scrapbook-like quality to the overall design.