The document describes the album artwork for three death metal albums. Each cover features an evil scientist with an undead army set against an apocalyptic backdrop. The first shows the scientist scouring a decaying planet, fitting the yellow-brown color scheme. The second depicts meteors destroying Earth, continuing a space theme. The third shows the scientist's alien army killing an astronaut on a dead planet, suggesting he has conquered Earth. Common elements across the covers include generic death metal fonts, fitting color schemes, continuing storylines, and attribution to the rule of thirds composition rule.
The document reports the results of several surveys given to an audience about a music magazine. The surveys asked about what they would change, their preferred content, the genre of music the magazine represents, dislikes, and suggestions for additions. The results showed that most of the audience was satisfied with the magazine as-is and felt it successfully represented an indie rock genre. A few respondents suggested minor changes like more articles on the cover or expanding the gig section, but the majority wanted no changes, so the creator decided to leave the magazine as is.
The document discusses how the author represented a particular social group in their indie rock music magazine aimed at people aged 13-25. The author used informal but proper English in the language of the magazine to make the target audience feel it was directed at them. While more male readers were expected, articles were not aimed at any specific sex. The magazine portrayed the target group by using males as cover stars wearing clothes and styles the audience could relate to and be inspired by. Props like guitars on the cover further showed it was a music magazine and conveyed the attitude of the indie rock audience.
Sean used various design software and tools to create the front cover and interior pages of a magazine. In Photoshop, he used the ellipse tool to create rounded shapes for the price and article puffs on the front cover. He also used the rectangle tool to make the banner and skyline. In Quark, he placed images using the picture content tool and added rectangular shapes to one side of a double page spread using the rectangle box tool. He also used the line tool to separate parts of the contents page and article columns. Final images were taken using a Nikon DS100 camera.
1) The document describes the process of creating a contents page for a magazine, including adding images and formatting text.
2) Various fonts were used for headings, article titles, and page numbers. Images were sized to fit the columns.
3) The layout was modified from the original plan, including repositioning the "contents" heading and spreading an image across two columns.
The author started an indie rock magazine to attract that audience. To do so, the magazine features a unique font, offers free music posters and CDs, and includes articles about indie rock bands and genres. The cover star's clothing also reflects indie rock style. The color scheme of black, red, and white was shown to appeal to indie rock fans. Contrasting colors like white text on a black background help the masthead stand out and catch readers' eyes.
Pisco es una ciudad peruana ubicada a 230 km al sureste de Lima, a orillas del Océano Pacífico. Tiene una población de aproximadamente 110,000 habitantes. Algunos platos típicos de Pisco son el ceviche, picarones, chicharrón de pescado y escabeche. La flora incluye plantas como el ají, albahaca y algodón, mientras que la fauna comprende especies marinas como la malagua y la estrella de mar, así como insectos terrestres.
The document describes the album artwork for three death metal albums. Each cover features an evil scientist with an undead army set against an apocalyptic backdrop. The first shows the scientist scouring a decaying planet, fitting the yellow-brown color scheme. The second depicts meteors destroying Earth, continuing a space theme. The third shows the scientist's alien army killing an astronaut on a dead planet, suggesting he has conquered Earth. Common elements across the covers include generic death metal fonts, fitting color schemes, continuing storylines, and attribution to the rule of thirds composition rule.
The document reports the results of several surveys given to an audience about a music magazine. The surveys asked about what they would change, their preferred content, the genre of music the magazine represents, dislikes, and suggestions for additions. The results showed that most of the audience was satisfied with the magazine as-is and felt it successfully represented an indie rock genre. A few respondents suggested minor changes like more articles on the cover or expanding the gig section, but the majority wanted no changes, so the creator decided to leave the magazine as is.
The document discusses how the author represented a particular social group in their indie rock music magazine aimed at people aged 13-25. The author used informal but proper English in the language of the magazine to make the target audience feel it was directed at them. While more male readers were expected, articles were not aimed at any specific sex. The magazine portrayed the target group by using males as cover stars wearing clothes and styles the audience could relate to and be inspired by. Props like guitars on the cover further showed it was a music magazine and conveyed the attitude of the indie rock audience.
Sean used various design software and tools to create the front cover and interior pages of a magazine. In Photoshop, he used the ellipse tool to create rounded shapes for the price and article puffs on the front cover. He also used the rectangle tool to make the banner and skyline. In Quark, he placed images using the picture content tool and added rectangular shapes to one side of a double page spread using the rectangle box tool. He also used the line tool to separate parts of the contents page and article columns. Final images were taken using a Nikon DS100 camera.
1) The document describes the process of creating a contents page for a magazine, including adding images and formatting text.
2) Various fonts were used for headings, article titles, and page numbers. Images were sized to fit the columns.
3) The layout was modified from the original plan, including repositioning the "contents" heading and spreading an image across two columns.
The author started an indie rock magazine to attract that audience. To do so, the magazine features a unique font, offers free music posters and CDs, and includes articles about indie rock bands and genres. The cover star's clothing also reflects indie rock style. The color scheme of black, red, and white was shown to appeal to indie rock fans. Contrasting colors like white text on a black background help the masthead stand out and catch readers' eyes.
Pisco es una ciudad peruana ubicada a 230 km al sureste de Lima, a orillas del Océano Pacífico. Tiene una población de aproximadamente 110,000 habitantes. Algunos platos típicos de Pisco son el ceviche, picarones, chicharrón de pescado y escabeche. La flora incluye plantas como el ají, albahaca y algodón, mientras que la fauna comprende especies marinas como la malagua y la estrella de mar, así como insectos terrestres.
1. The document outlines the opening sequence treatment sheet for a film called "Savage". It provides details on the cast, props, and 15 shot breakdown for the opening scene.
2. The opening scene follows a young girl walking through the woods while talking to her mother on the phone. She is startled by noises and encounters a young boy who scares her as a prank.
3. As the boy asks the girl a question, a man in an animal mask suddenly appears and kills the boy with a large knife. The girl flees in terror but runs into a brick wall and jumps a fence, only to be hit by a car as the screen fades to black.
Sean used various design software and tools to create the front cover and interior pages of a magazine. In Photoshop, he used the ellipse tool to create rounded shapes for the price and article puffs on the cover. He also used the rectangle tool to make the banner and skyline. In Quark, he placed images using the picture content tool and added rectangular shapes to one side of a double page spread using the rectangle box tool. He also used the line tool to separate parts of the contents page and article columns. Final images were taken using a Nikon DS100 camera.
The document describes the steps taken to design the front cover of a magazine. It discusses selecting fonts, adding a masthead in a bold font style to suit rock music, and including the issue number and date. The main steps also included editing an image to be used as a background, adding banners and skylines of the same size using shapes and copying, making puff graphics using circles and effects, and adding cover lines and text of different fonts and sizes with strokes applied for visibility. The final design is shown at the bottom.
The document describes the process of laying out a double page magazine spread. The creator sets up facing pages with three columns each and adds large and small images to the left and right pages respectively. Headlines, page numbers and website links are added using different fonts and colors. Lines are added to the right page for visual interest and to continue the green color scheme. An interview is added to the right columns using varying fonts for questions and answers. A pull quote is extracted and emphasized. A standfirst introducing the article is placed above in a larger font, and image captions are added below in a smaller font.
1. The document outlines the opening sequence treatment sheet for a film called "Savage". It provides details on the cast, props, and 15 shot breakdown for the opening scene.
2. The opening scene follows a young girl walking through the woods while talking to her mother on the phone. She is startled by noises and encounters a young boy who scares her as a prank.
3. As the boy asks the girl a question, a man in an animal mask suddenly appears and kills the boy with a large knife. The girl flees in terror but runs into a brick wall and jumps a fence, only to be hit by a car as the screen fades to black.
Sean used various design software and tools to create the front cover and interior pages of a magazine. In Photoshop, he used the ellipse tool to create rounded shapes for the price and article puffs on the cover. He also used the rectangle tool to make the banner and skyline. In Quark, he placed images using the picture content tool and added rectangular shapes to one side of a double page spread using the rectangle box tool. He also used the line tool to separate parts of the contents page and article columns. Final images were taken using a Nikon DS100 camera.
The document describes the steps taken to design the front cover of a magazine. It discusses selecting fonts, adding a masthead in a bold font style to suit rock music, and including the issue number and date. The main steps also included editing an image to be used as a background, adding banners and skylines of the same size using shapes and copying, making puff graphics using circles and effects, and adding cover lines and text of different fonts and sizes with strokes applied for visibility. The final design is shown at the bottom.
The document describes the process of laying out a double page magazine spread. The creator sets up facing pages with three columns each and adds large and small images to the left and right pages respectively. Headlines, page numbers and website links are added using different fonts and colors. Lines are added to the right page for visual interest and to continue the green color scheme. An interview is added to the right columns using varying fonts for questions and answers. A pull quote is extracted and emphasized. A standfirst introducing the article is placed above in a larger font, and image captions are added below in a smaller font.