The document provides an analysis of the cover and internal layout of the September issue of Vogue magazine. It finds that:
1) The cover uses warm autumnal colors like red, orange, and blue to draw attention to the main model. It also features the model's name to attract her fans.
2) Internally, the layout varies from text-heavy pages to full-page images to maintain reader interest. Around 40-50% of pages are advertisements given the target audience's affinity for designer brands.
3) The magazine aims to appeal to its primarily female, affluent readership through fashion advice, trends, and lifestyle content that encourages luxury consumption.
The document provides an analysis of the layout, design, and content of the magazine Vogue. Some key points:
1) The September issue uses warm autumnal colors like red, orange, and blue on the cover to set the seasonal tone. Images are at eye-level to engage the reader.
2) Articles within cater to the target audience of 34-year-old women with sophisticated yet simple designs. Trend pieces and fashion recommendations aim to influence purchasing decisions.
3) Photography, styling, and topics featured aim to inspire the fashionable and luxury lifestyle associated with the Vogue brand and readership. Formats vary across pages to maintain visual interest.
Vogue and Elle magazines follow some consistent design elements across issues but also allow for variation. Both prominently feature the celebrity or model on the cover along with brief descriptions of articles. Vogue uses a regimented layout with consistent placement of cover lines, barcodes, and sections. However, it varies blurring and gutters between articles. Elle utilizes minimalist color schemes and overlapping text on photos for impact. While maintaining some shared branding elements, the magazines incorporate flexibility in internal designs.
The document compares the design conventions used for mastheads, images, typography, layouts, and color palettes on the covers and contents pages of national versus regional magazines. For national magazines, design elements like the masthead, main image, and use of bold colors and fonts follow conventions to clearly communicate the brand and draw attention. Regional magazines take simpler approaches with their design to clearly communicate what they are for audiences not already familiar with the brand.
The document provides information about music magazines, including:
- The first music magazine was founded in 1894 called Billboard. Music magazines grew popular in the 1950s-1960s with magazines like NME and Rolling Stone.
- The biggest music magazine publishers currently are Rolling Stone, NME, Smash Hits, Kerrang!, and Billboard.
- The document then analyzes sample pages from magazines like NME and Smash Hits, examining things like layout, colors, target audiences, and conventions used across issues.
The document discusses elements that should be included on the front cover of a school magazine, such as the masthead, main image, cover lines, and barcode/price to identify the publication and attract readers. It also provides audience research showing common elements readers feel should be in a school magazine, like student achievements and photos. The end includes forms for planning a school magazine cover and contents page by considering the target audience, images, colors, and technical details.
This document analyzes and summarizes the key elements of different music magazine covers and contents pages. It finds that magazine covers typically feature a prominent image of a well-known musician to attract readers. Covers use color schemes and graphic design to draw attention to the image over other elements like the magazine title. Contents pages similarly employ images and highlighting to promote major stories while providing listings of additional articles in a readable format. The analyzed magazines vary styles and target audiences but consistently prioritize attracting readers through celebrity images and design that guides attention.
The document provides information on two mood boards and analyses of magazine covers and elements. For the teenage mood board, it discusses how teens enjoy music, sports, social media, parties and fun with friends. The football magazine mood board discusses brands like FourFourTwo and design elements like fonts, colors, photos and layouts that appeal to different age groups. It also discusses inspirational poster design, magazine spreads, color palettes, photo shots, and the creator's magazine covers featuring Dave which take an unconventional simple design approach.
The document describes the design elements of two magazine covers - NME magazine and Top of the Pops magazine. For NME, it discusses the color palette of red, white and black which appeals to its rock music audience. The large masthead in white stands out against the red background. The main image takes up the whole cover with a close-up shot of Florence. For Top of the Pops, the target audience is young girls aged 8-13. It uses a girly color palette of pink, white and purple. The cover features a mid-shot of Cheryl Cole and text that tells readers "you can be Cheryl." Both magazines employ consistent color palettes, prominent cover lines and images, and mast
The document provides an analysis of the layout, design, and content of the magazine Vogue. Some key points:
1) The September issue uses warm autumnal colors like red, orange, and blue on the cover to set the seasonal tone. Images are at eye-level to engage the reader.
2) Articles within cater to the target audience of 34-year-old women with sophisticated yet simple designs. Trend pieces and fashion recommendations aim to influence purchasing decisions.
3) Photography, styling, and topics featured aim to inspire the fashionable and luxury lifestyle associated with the Vogue brand and readership. Formats vary across pages to maintain visual interest.
Vogue and Elle magazines follow some consistent design elements across issues but also allow for variation. Both prominently feature the celebrity or model on the cover along with brief descriptions of articles. Vogue uses a regimented layout with consistent placement of cover lines, barcodes, and sections. However, it varies blurring and gutters between articles. Elle utilizes minimalist color schemes and overlapping text on photos for impact. While maintaining some shared branding elements, the magazines incorporate flexibility in internal designs.
The document compares the design conventions used for mastheads, images, typography, layouts, and color palettes on the covers and contents pages of national versus regional magazines. For national magazines, design elements like the masthead, main image, and use of bold colors and fonts follow conventions to clearly communicate the brand and draw attention. Regional magazines take simpler approaches with their design to clearly communicate what they are for audiences not already familiar with the brand.
The document provides information about music magazines, including:
- The first music magazine was founded in 1894 called Billboard. Music magazines grew popular in the 1950s-1960s with magazines like NME and Rolling Stone.
- The biggest music magazine publishers currently are Rolling Stone, NME, Smash Hits, Kerrang!, and Billboard.
- The document then analyzes sample pages from magazines like NME and Smash Hits, examining things like layout, colors, target audiences, and conventions used across issues.
The document discusses elements that should be included on the front cover of a school magazine, such as the masthead, main image, cover lines, and barcode/price to identify the publication and attract readers. It also provides audience research showing common elements readers feel should be in a school magazine, like student achievements and photos. The end includes forms for planning a school magazine cover and contents page by considering the target audience, images, colors, and technical details.
This document analyzes and summarizes the key elements of different music magazine covers and contents pages. It finds that magazine covers typically feature a prominent image of a well-known musician to attract readers. Covers use color schemes and graphic design to draw attention to the image over other elements like the magazine title. Contents pages similarly employ images and highlighting to promote major stories while providing listings of additional articles in a readable format. The analyzed magazines vary styles and target audiences but consistently prioritize attracting readers through celebrity images and design that guides attention.
The document provides information on two mood boards and analyses of magazine covers and elements. For the teenage mood board, it discusses how teens enjoy music, sports, social media, parties and fun with friends. The football magazine mood board discusses brands like FourFourTwo and design elements like fonts, colors, photos and layouts that appeal to different age groups. It also discusses inspirational poster design, magazine spreads, color palettes, photo shots, and the creator's magazine covers featuring Dave which take an unconventional simple design approach.
The document describes the design elements of two magazine covers - NME magazine and Top of the Pops magazine. For NME, it discusses the color palette of red, white and black which appeals to its rock music audience. The large masthead in white stands out against the red background. The main image takes up the whole cover with a close-up shot of Florence. For Top of the Pops, the target audience is young girls aged 8-13. It uses a girly color palette of pink, white and purple. The cover features a mid-shot of Cheryl Cole and text that tells readers "you can be Cheryl." Both magazines employ consistent color palettes, prominent cover lines and images, and mast
The document analyzes the layout and design elements of magazine covers. It discusses various components like the masthead, headlines, images, and pricing and how they are used to attract readers. The masthead uses a bold, large font in a bright color to stand out. Headlines also use bold, large fonts and catch the eye. Main images usually feature celebrities to draw interest. Pricing and barcodes provide purchase information. Overall, the covers aim to attract readers through eye-catching design and celebrity content.
The document analyzes the layout and design elements of magazine covers. It discusses various components like the masthead, headlines, images, and pricing and how they are used to attract readers. The masthead uses a bold, large font in a bright color to stand out. Headlines also use bold, large fonts and catch the eye. Main images usually feature celebrities to draw interest. Pricing and barcodes provide necessary purchasing information. Overall, the covers aim to attract readers through eye-catching design and celebrity features.
The document discusses the mastheads of several music magazines, including Mojo, Q, Kerrang, Billboard, and We Love Pop. It analyzes the design elements, colors, fonts, and symbols used in each masthead and how they relate to the magazine's intended audience and genre of music covered. Key points made include how prominent mastheads help magazines stand out, the use of colors like red and black to attract attention, and how some mastheads change design depending on the issue while maintaining recognizable elements.
Vibe is a music magazine founded in 1993 that focuses on R&B and hip-hop. It targets a young, urban audience between ages 18-34 interested in hip-hop culture. In the 2000s, its circulation was around 800,000 copies per issue. Though print production stopped in 2009, the magazine was acquired by a media company and continues digitally. The magazine's covers feature a single bold theme and image to represent its serious attention to music and draw in its target audience.
This magazine cover features a photo of model Cara Delevingne. The main colors used are brown, white, red, and black. Subtitles promote stories about fashion to encourage readers to buy the issue. The cover aims to attract fans of both Cara and the famous Vogue magazine brand.
This document analyzes the contents page of the Q magazine. It notes that unlike magazine covers, contents pages aim to inform readers about what is inside the issue. Q's contents page includes numbered images relating to articles and uses additional photos to illustrate stories. It follows conventions like using hierarchies of image size to denote importance and columns to organize information. The analysis examines design elements like sections, layout, and promotion techniques to understand how Q communicates to its audience through its contents page.
The document analyzes and summarizes various elements of Vibe Magazine covers and pages, including the masthead, images, coverlines, and contents page. It notes that the masthead takes up the top row and remains consistent to identify the publication. The cover image is of Kanye West making eye contact to engage readers. Coverlines are professionally aligned and use the house style colors of blue, pink, and black. The contents page focuses on another image of Kanye West to reinforce the cover theme and issue topic.
The document summarizes the design elements of two magazine covers. Both covers utilize sans serif fonts, feature a prominent masthead, and place key information in areas of high visual importance according to the Gutenberg diagram. The first cover features Kendrick Lamar in white against a red background. The second cover shows a close-up of a model with brightly colored hair against a light blue background. Consistent use of color schemes, font styles, and graphic element placement demonstrate adherence to each magazine's house style.
The contents page of a rock music magazine uses a cluttered and bold layout to attract their target audience. Large bold fonts are used for section headings to emphasize the magazine's angsty style. Images of rockers in rebellious poses provide a taste of the magazine's content without revealing too much. A short note from the informal editor builds rapport with readers by relating to the target market.
The document provides information on the layout, images, words, colors, fonts, and captions used in Elle magazine. Regarding layout, the cover uses a large celebrity image that overlaps the title. Inside pages have centered images with text wrapped around. Images are large, bold, and airbrushed to portray an aspirational lifestyle. Words are exaggerated to attract readers and highlight topics. Colors throughout are coordinated and bright to maintain a relaxed feel. Fonts are varied for contrast and emphasis. Captions advertise contents and link images to text. Anchors and codes connect elements across pages.
This magazine cover targets an older, more educated audience interested in classical music. The masthead at the top is formal and elegant. The main image takes up the whole cover and shows a classical musician in a calm, sophisticated pose. The main cover line introduces the musician and the story in simple, understated text. Fonts and colors across the page are mellow and spread out for readability. The overall presentation is simple and professional to match the classical music genre and appeal to its audience.
The magazine focuses on photography and uses minimalistic designs. It has a simple black and white cover with example photos to showcase content. The main article profiles a guest photographer and their work shooting photos in French Polynesia. Photos throughout the magazine follow a similar minimalistic, warm color style. Both the magazine and accompanying website have clean, uncluttered designs that complement each other and the content focused on photography inspiration.
The document analyzes three magazine covers. For Cover 1, the summary is: The masthead covers Kim Kardashian's face, showing her importance. The cover promotes an article on Kim speaking, using her popularity to sell magazines. The color scheme and large cover image are intended to attract female readers interested in celebrity gossip. For Cover 2, the summary is: The masthead is small and unique, placed in the corner. The main image features YouTube star Zoella, targeting teenage audiences. Colorful articles promote music celebrities. For Cover 3, the summary is: The masthead is covered by Emilia Clarke, indicating the magazine's popularity. Clarke's large cover image acts as a sell for fans of Games of
This drum magazine contents page appeals to its audience through repeated drum imagery and references. Articles are clearly listed with page numbers in bold
Kerrang! is a UK-based magazine devoted to rock music. It was initially focused on heavy metal genres but expanded its coverage in the 2000s. While sales declined after the nu-metal trend ended, adopting emo and metalcore helped boost readership. Kerrang! primarily targets 16-24 year old males and appeals to them through imagery of iconic male bands. It maintains a devoted audience through diverse online content that keeps readers engaged between issues.
Music magazine annotations presentation.carasearle
The document analyzes the design techniques used in various magazine spreads. It discusses elements like mastheads, color schemes, photographs, fonts, and layouts. Across multiple pages, consistency is used to build brand recognition while intriguing images and text aim to attract and engage readers. For example, a two-page article on a week in Ibiza uses exciting photos and an enticing standfirst to encourage reading the full piece.
The document analyzes the codes and conventions used in the music magazine Kerrang!. Front covers typically feature a mid-shot image of the cover star using non-verbal communication to directly address the audience. Box-outs highlight words in colors that represent the rock genre. The established house theme of red, white, yellow and black is used throughout. Contents pages list articles under subheadings and continue the house theme colors. Double page spreads feature a long-shot main image of the topic and use quotes and section titles in bold with thumbnails of related images.
The document discusses key aspects of effective execution including defining execution, prerequisites like knowing your business and having the right people, the cycle of execution involving planning, metrics, and reviews, and ensuring good execution even during difficult times. It notes that business knowledge is key to good execution and leaders must stay learning from their team. Reviews bridge plans and reality, and integrity and compliance are important for results.
The document analyzes the layout and design elements of magazine covers. It discusses various components like the masthead, headlines, images, and pricing and how they are used to attract readers. The masthead uses a bold, large font in a bright color to stand out. Headlines also use bold, large fonts and catch the eye. Main images usually feature celebrities to draw interest. Pricing and barcodes provide purchase information. Overall, the covers aim to attract readers through eye-catching design and celebrity content.
The document analyzes the layout and design elements of magazine covers. It discusses various components like the masthead, headlines, images, and pricing and how they are used to attract readers. The masthead uses a bold, large font in a bright color to stand out. Headlines also use bold, large fonts and catch the eye. Main images usually feature celebrities to draw interest. Pricing and barcodes provide necessary purchasing information. Overall, the covers aim to attract readers through eye-catching design and celebrity features.
The document discusses the mastheads of several music magazines, including Mojo, Q, Kerrang, Billboard, and We Love Pop. It analyzes the design elements, colors, fonts, and symbols used in each masthead and how they relate to the magazine's intended audience and genre of music covered. Key points made include how prominent mastheads help magazines stand out, the use of colors like red and black to attract attention, and how some mastheads change design depending on the issue while maintaining recognizable elements.
Vibe is a music magazine founded in 1993 that focuses on R&B and hip-hop. It targets a young, urban audience between ages 18-34 interested in hip-hop culture. In the 2000s, its circulation was around 800,000 copies per issue. Though print production stopped in 2009, the magazine was acquired by a media company and continues digitally. The magazine's covers feature a single bold theme and image to represent its serious attention to music and draw in its target audience.
This magazine cover features a photo of model Cara Delevingne. The main colors used are brown, white, red, and black. Subtitles promote stories about fashion to encourage readers to buy the issue. The cover aims to attract fans of both Cara and the famous Vogue magazine brand.
This document analyzes the contents page of the Q magazine. It notes that unlike magazine covers, contents pages aim to inform readers about what is inside the issue. Q's contents page includes numbered images relating to articles and uses additional photos to illustrate stories. It follows conventions like using hierarchies of image size to denote importance and columns to organize information. The analysis examines design elements like sections, layout, and promotion techniques to understand how Q communicates to its audience through its contents page.
The document analyzes and summarizes various elements of Vibe Magazine covers and pages, including the masthead, images, coverlines, and contents page. It notes that the masthead takes up the top row and remains consistent to identify the publication. The cover image is of Kanye West making eye contact to engage readers. Coverlines are professionally aligned and use the house style colors of blue, pink, and black. The contents page focuses on another image of Kanye West to reinforce the cover theme and issue topic.
The document summarizes the design elements of two magazine covers. Both covers utilize sans serif fonts, feature a prominent masthead, and place key information in areas of high visual importance according to the Gutenberg diagram. The first cover features Kendrick Lamar in white against a red background. The second cover shows a close-up of a model with brightly colored hair against a light blue background. Consistent use of color schemes, font styles, and graphic element placement demonstrate adherence to each magazine's house style.
The contents page of a rock music magazine uses a cluttered and bold layout to attract their target audience. Large bold fonts are used for section headings to emphasize the magazine's angsty style. Images of rockers in rebellious poses provide a taste of the magazine's content without revealing too much. A short note from the informal editor builds rapport with readers by relating to the target market.
The document provides information on the layout, images, words, colors, fonts, and captions used in Elle magazine. Regarding layout, the cover uses a large celebrity image that overlaps the title. Inside pages have centered images with text wrapped around. Images are large, bold, and airbrushed to portray an aspirational lifestyle. Words are exaggerated to attract readers and highlight topics. Colors throughout are coordinated and bright to maintain a relaxed feel. Fonts are varied for contrast and emphasis. Captions advertise contents and link images to text. Anchors and codes connect elements across pages.
This magazine cover targets an older, more educated audience interested in classical music. The masthead at the top is formal and elegant. The main image takes up the whole cover and shows a classical musician in a calm, sophisticated pose. The main cover line introduces the musician and the story in simple, understated text. Fonts and colors across the page are mellow and spread out for readability. The overall presentation is simple and professional to match the classical music genre and appeal to its audience.
The magazine focuses on photography and uses minimalistic designs. It has a simple black and white cover with example photos to showcase content. The main article profiles a guest photographer and their work shooting photos in French Polynesia. Photos throughout the magazine follow a similar minimalistic, warm color style. Both the magazine and accompanying website have clean, uncluttered designs that complement each other and the content focused on photography inspiration.
The document analyzes three magazine covers. For Cover 1, the summary is: The masthead covers Kim Kardashian's face, showing her importance. The cover promotes an article on Kim speaking, using her popularity to sell magazines. The color scheme and large cover image are intended to attract female readers interested in celebrity gossip. For Cover 2, the summary is: The masthead is small and unique, placed in the corner. The main image features YouTube star Zoella, targeting teenage audiences. Colorful articles promote music celebrities. For Cover 3, the summary is: The masthead is covered by Emilia Clarke, indicating the magazine's popularity. Clarke's large cover image acts as a sell for fans of Games of
This drum magazine contents page appeals to its audience through repeated drum imagery and references. Articles are clearly listed with page numbers in bold
Kerrang! is a UK-based magazine devoted to rock music. It was initially focused on heavy metal genres but expanded its coverage in the 2000s. While sales declined after the nu-metal trend ended, adopting emo and metalcore helped boost readership. Kerrang! primarily targets 16-24 year old males and appeals to them through imagery of iconic male bands. It maintains a devoted audience through diverse online content that keeps readers engaged between issues.
Music magazine annotations presentation.carasearle
The document analyzes the design techniques used in various magazine spreads. It discusses elements like mastheads, color schemes, photographs, fonts, and layouts. Across multiple pages, consistency is used to build brand recognition while intriguing images and text aim to attract and engage readers. For example, a two-page article on a week in Ibiza uses exciting photos and an enticing standfirst to encourage reading the full piece.
The document analyzes the codes and conventions used in the music magazine Kerrang!. Front covers typically feature a mid-shot image of the cover star using non-verbal communication to directly address the audience. Box-outs highlight words in colors that represent the rock genre. The established house theme of red, white, yellow and black is used throughout. Contents pages list articles under subheadings and continue the house theme colors. Double page spreads feature a long-shot main image of the topic and use quotes and section titles in bold with thumbnails of related images.
The document discusses key aspects of effective execution including defining execution, prerequisites like knowing your business and having the right people, the cycle of execution involving planning, metrics, and reviews, and ensuring good execution even during difficult times. It notes that business knowledge is key to good execution and leaders must stay learning from their team. Reviews bridge plans and reality, and integrity and compliance are important for results.
Disabled people at the job market in italy completoMaria La Porta
1) There are approximately 3 million disabled people in Italy, comprising 5% of the population. The majority are motor disabled or have sight or hearing impairments.
2) While Italian law aims to promote social integration and employment of disabled individuals, only 16% of disabled people of working age have jobs, compared to 54% of non-disabled people.
3) The document outlines Italian laws regarding employment quotas for disabled people in both public and private sectors, as well as incentives for companies that meet quotas and penalties for those that do not. The goal is to facilitate job access and integration for disabled individuals.
O documento discute as diferentes formas de ligar orações em frases e textos. Apresenta os tipos de orações coordenadas e subordinadas, incluindo exemplos de orações coordenadas copulativas, adversativas e disjuntivas. Também explica os tipos de orações subordinadas, como temporais, causais, condicionais e finais.
This document analyzes and compares different cover designs used by the magazine NME over time. It notes that more recent covers have used a minimalist design with candid photos and fewer headlines, as seen on a cover featuring the band Slaves. Older covers had a busier design with more text and descriptors to grab attention, as seen on a cover featuring Oasis. The most effective cover combined elements of both styles by including details on featured artists, a provocative quote, and a large centered headshot of Noel Gallagher making eye contact.
The document discusses initial ideas for a magazine focused on electronic club music. It will target males and females ages 16-25. The front cover will use bright blues and oranges with bold fonts to grab attention. It will feature top artists, clubs, and reviews. The contents page will list articles and some may include images. The double page spread will interview the artist on the cover and include short lists. Photographs will use medium shots that clearly show faces of artists featured.
This magazine cover targets 10-15 year olds. It uses bright, fun colors like pink and features many male artists to attract its primarily female audience. The cover is cluttered with images and text scattered across the page rather than following traditional layout rules, mirroring how busy a teenager's life may feel. The main cover line anchors with an image of singer Shayne Ward, drawing the most attention to promote his story inside.
The document analyzes the contents page of a magazine. It discusses various design elements including the title, editor's comment, use of images to highlight cover stories, colors used, subscription deals section, summaries of articles, fonts, and layout. Overall, the contents page follows typical magazine design conventions but also has some unique elements like starting columns halfway down and using the top half for images only. The analysis provides insights into how the contents page is effectively designed to engage and guide readers.
The document describes the design elements of two magazine covers - NME magazine and Top of the Pops magazine. For NME, it discusses the color palette of red, white and black which appeals to its rock music audience. The large masthead in white stands out against the red background. The main image takes up the whole cover with a close-up shot of Florence. For Top of the Pops, the target audience is young girls aged 8-13. It uses a pink, white and purple color scheme with images of celebrities like Cheryl Cole to appeal to this demographic. The masthead is in pink bubbles to resemble girlish handwriting. Both magazines employ consistent color palettes and layouts across their covers and contents
The document analyzes the contents pages of three different music magazines - NME, Kerrang, and Classic FM. For each magazine, key design elements of the contents page are identified and their purpose is discussed. Common elements analyzed across magazines include mastheads, images, color schemes, and subscription advertisements. Design choices are explained as ways to attract readers, visually organize information, promote a magazine's brand and target demographic, and encourage subscriptions which generate revenue.
This document analyzes and compares the front covers of two music magazines, NME and Vibe. Both magazines prominently feature a central artist image intended to attract attention, though NME's image directly engages the viewer while Vibe's does not. They also both include cover lines around the image highlighting other artists and stories. While NME uses brighter colors and fonts to appear more inviting, Vibe has a simpler, modern aesthetic likely aimed at younger audiences. Overall the magazines employ similar design strategies like barcode placement and highlighted artist names, but distinguish themselves through stylistic choices to appeal to different readers.
This document analyzes and summarizes the front and contents pages of three different magazines.
For the first magazine, it notes the simple masthead and font conveying a sophisticated yet sensible style. The contents page uses consistent fonts and clear labeling of photos.
The second magazine uses a familiar masthead and informal main image with pop culture references to engage readers. Its contents page establishes a unique identity with tilted informal text and festival photo.
The third magazine has a futuristic masthead, bottom strip informing of articles, issue number, and attention-grabbing slogan. It follows typical magazine conventions with an integrated cover.
The document provides information about music magazines, including:
- The first music magazine was founded in 1894 called Billboard. Music magazines grew in popularity in the 1950s-1960s with magazines like NME and Rolling Stone.
- The biggest music magazine publishers currently are Rolling Stone, NME, Smash Hits, Kerrang!, and Billboard.
- Sample pages from magazines like NME and Smash Hits show conventions like layout, colors, pictures, and writing styles used to appeal to different target audiences.
This magazine cover features Cheryl Fernandez-Versini with dramatic makeup. There is a large headline about her, indicating an article inside. The masthead stands out with red and white contrast. Cover lines in smaller text advertise additional stories. The tagline identifies it as the UK's biggest music magazine. Main headlines draw most attention to promote popular features. Dark colors and red accents create a sexy vibe to match Cheryl's image. Small text displays the issue date and number.
AS Level Media Fashion Magazine Production TreatmentPetramediastudies
1. Fashion Week - This article would describe the various international fashion weeks and the latest trends showcased. It provides an overview of global fashion.
2. Style Guide 101 - This article would explore different styles around the world and how they differ. It educates readers on various style types.
3. Life as a Designer - This "behind the scenes" article gives readers insight into the challenges of working in the fashion industry and could inspire some to pursue design careers. It provides motivation and realism.
The document analyzes the design of a magazine contents page. It discusses the typography, layout, colors, images, language, and conventions used. The headline font stands out from the smaller body text for readability. The layout strategically places important sections like the billboard charts. Images of celebrities featured in the magazine help engage the target audience. Simple black, white, and gray colors along with occasional blue keep the design modern, stylish, and help the content stand out to readers. Abbreviated language in the descriptions makes the page easier to read.
The document discusses ideas for two music magazines called Flat Bass and TV. For Flat Bass, the summary proposes keeping a casual layout seen in the inspiration magazine XXL, including repeating its color scheme and placing the main headline at the bottom of the cover. For TV, it suggests a more professional design seen in the inspiration magazine, with a bold font, memorable masthead, and color scheme of black, red, and yellow. Both magazines aim to attract mature music fans through interviews, gossip, and previews of upcoming content to encourage monthly purchases. Repetition of elements from inspiration magazines and subtle differences are intended to clearly communicate the genre while keeping the magazines unique.
The document discusses plans for producing a monthly music magazine, including scheduling content creation, editing, layout, printing, and distribution. Key stages involve assigning articles, designing pages, proofreading, and approving the final printed copies before mass production. The production process is outlined day-by-day to coordinate all tasks needed to launch each issue of the magazine on time.
This document provides a summary of key elements found in various music magazines' media packs and covers. It describes common design features across magazines like Rock Sound, Billboard, Q Magazine, including prominent artist images, plugs and puffs to attract readers, and consistent branding elements. Information on the target audiences and what readers can access in each magazine is also summarized. The document analyzes specific techniques used across magazine covers and spreads to engage and inform readers.
- The first music magazine was founded in 1894 called Billboard which was devoted to the music industry. Music magazines became popular in the 1950s-1960s with magazines like NME and Rolling Stone.
- Some of the biggest music magazine publishers today include Rolling Stone, NME, Smash Hits, Kerrang, and Billboard. They cover various genres of music and have large international readerships.
- Music magazine covers use visual elements like photos and minimal text to attract readers' attention. Colors, layouts, and logos are consistent to help readers recognize the magazine. Covers aim to appeal to the target demographic for each publication.
This document analyzes magazine covers and contents pages for two different magazines - Top of the Pops and NME. For the Top of the Pops magazine cover and contents page, the analysis finds that they target young girls ages 8-13 through the use of bright colors like pink and purple, images of popular artists like Cher Lloyd, and fashion/celebrity focused content. The NME magazine cover and contents page are analyzed as targeting males ages 16-22 through grittier band images, content focused on concerts and music news, and a simple color scheme. Key design elements like logos, images, and sectioning of content are also examined.
This document discusses the layout and design of two magazines: GQ magazine and Billboard magazine.
For GQ magazine, the summary describes the target audience as mainly middle-aged men, ages 17-45, from middle to upper class. It also discusses the formal text, simple fonts and colors used (red, black, white).
For Billboard magazine, the target audience is described as having a wide age range from teenagers to those in their late 30s, appealing to both genders and mainly working class readers. The magazine uses a monochrome color scheme with simple fonts and layout for a laidback feel.
The document analyzes the front covers of several music magazines, comparing their design elements and how they target different audiences. For Top of the Pops magazine, which targets teenage girls, the analysis notes the use of bright colors, celebrities, and slang to appeal to readers. Billboard magazine, aimed at ages 16-28 of both genders, features Katy Perry and uses pink and blue to attract multiple demographics. Kerrang magazine, focused on rock music, has a bold title and short headlines featuring exclamation points to grab attention. Across magazines, common design elements include the masthead, barcodes, and consistent color schemes, while language, images and styles are tailored to each publication's unique genre and readership.
The document provides an analysis of the front cover, contents page, and a double page spread from the magazine "Top of the Pops". It examines the typography, color, imagery, layout, and language used and how they appeal to the magazine's target audience of teenage girls. Key conventions highlighted include an informal sans-serif font, bold text, bright colors, large celebrity images, a cluttered yet organized layout, and informal language to attract and keep readers engaged. The analysis concludes the magazine effectively uses these techniques to match its pop genre and target demographic.
1) The document analyzes the layout, design elements, and content of fashion magazines like Vogue, Elle, and Marie Claire.
2) It finds that the magazines have consistent masthead placement and color schemes across issues to maintain brand identity while incorporating seasonal trends.
3) The magazines aim to portray an aspirational lifestyle through highly edited images of tall, thin models and celebrities, while also including some more affordable fashion options without discussing their quality or production.
Emily Shaw created various design options for a hairdressing client within the given constraints. She produced business cards, logos, and mock social media posts over two weeks. Emily faced some copyright issues using stock images but addressed this by editing photos herself. She communicated with the client face-to-face after the first week and upon completion to receive feedback. Emily created multiple options to meet the open brief and requirements, learning about client communication and managing projects with creative freedom.
The document analyzes the layout, design elements, and content of Vogue, Elle, and Marie Claire magazines. It finds that they share many similarities in their masthead placement, use of color schemes relating to the season, and posed cover photo shoots. They also take a similar scrapbook-style approach to some interior pages while maintaining more formal article layouts. Additionally, the magazines feature a mix of high-end and high street brand advertisements to appeal to different audiences. Common elements across the magazines aim to portray an aspirational view of fashion and beauty.
Emily Shaw completed a design project for a client involving business cards, logos, and social media posts for a hairdressing business. She faced some copyright constraints in using stock images and fonts, but was able to adapt designs to avoid issues. She communicated with the client periodically to get feedback and ensure the designs met requirements. While she diverged from her original schedule, Emily delivered all requested elements on time. Through this project, she learned how to work within client constraints, communicate effectively, and further developed her Photoshop skills for designing professional materials.
Emily Shaw completed a design project for a hairdressing client that involved creating business cards, logos, and mock social media posts within legal and financial constraints. She found that carefully editing stock images and creating original graphics helped avoid copyright issues. The client provided feedback that ensured the designs met regulatory guidelines and represented hairdressing appropriately. Overall, the project was finished on time and within budget, and Emily learned valuable lessons about client communication, working within briefs, and further developing her design skills.
A contractual brief is a legal document between a client and employee that outlines the specific time scale, price, and task. It provides advantages like being legally binding so either party can take action if the terms are not followed. However, it must be read thoroughly to understand what is being agreed to due to its specificity and potential legal implications. A formal brief only provides key information while an informal brief has no binding documents and allows more creative freedom but lacks protections. It is important to thoroughly read any brief to understand client expectations and gauge what is required to meet their needs and standards.
This production schedule outlines the timeline for creating branding materials like a logo, business cards, and social media assets for a new mobile hairdressing business called New Look Mobile Hairdressing from May 8th to May 19th. The schedule has the designer beginning work on the logo on May 8th and receiving client feedback on designs by May 15th before shifting to create business cards, social media banners, logos and sample social media posts through the end of the month.
This document contains research and development work for a client project creating branding materials like business cards, a Facebook banner, and logo. The client needs these materials to help promote their mobile hairdressing business. The author generated several initial ideas and then chose to further develop two ideas combining feminine, handwritten elements with a more minimalist, professional style. Mockups and examples were provided. Market research showed the client has significant local competition from other hairdressers. The existing branding materials could be improved. The final ideas will be assessed against the project constraints before being presented.
Emily Shaw created a mental health awareness campaign with bright, positive graphics and messaging to counter other campaigns that portrayed mental health issues in a negative or dark way. She developed posters, merchandise, and a website mock-up to promote the campaign. While some pieces could be improved, surveys showed the campaign was well-suited to raising awareness and changing attitudes about mental health issues.
This document summarizes Emily Shaw's social action evaluation of her mental health awareness campaign. The campaign used bright colors and graphics instead of images to create a more positive look. Feedback indicated the campaign communicated its message clearly and was well-suited and appropriate for its target audience of raising mental health awareness.
Emily Shaw created a mental health awareness campaign for the charity Mind. Her goal was to portray mental health in a more positive light compared to existing campaigns, which often used dark imagery. She designed bright, graphic-heavy posters that included facts about mental health and contact information for Mind without using images. Emily also created merchandise like stickers, phone cases, and notebooks featuring her logo and graphics. She felt her finished pieces effectively communicated her message to raise awareness and support for Mind in a way that was appropriate and non-stigmatizing for all audiences.
The document summarizes Emily Shaw's social action evaluation of her mental health awareness campaign. The campaign used bright colors and graphics instead of images to create a more lighthearted look. Feedback from surveys showed that 100% of respondents agreed the campaign was well-suited to promoting mental health awareness and would help educate people and raise awareness, meeting the campaign's goals.
Emily Shaw created a mental health awareness campaign with bright, positive imagery and graphics instead of the typical dark or negative images used in other campaigns. Her campaign used circles throughout to represent wholeness. She created posters, merchandise, and a mock website homepage to raise awareness, provide information, and support the charity. A survey found that people felt her positive approach was effective. Overall, Emily believes her campaign pieces fit their intended purposes of changing attitudes, raising awareness, and building relationships regarding mental health issues.
The SmokeFree campaign poster aims to persuade people to quit smoking and raise awareness of the dangers of smoking through graphic imagery and facts. The poster uses a graphic image of mutations on a cigarette to visually portray the damage smoking can cause. It also includes a fact about how just 15 cigarettes can negatively impact health to catch viewers' attention. The poster provides links to SmokeFree websites to give people seeking help resources to quit smoking. The goal is to campaign against smoking by informing people of its health risks in an eye-catching way.
The document outlines final designs for a project including a logo, campaign posters, and merchandise. It lists four main sections: final logo, campaign posters, and merchandise providing an overview of the completed design work.
Emily Shaw was creating campaign posters with the phrase "Surviving or Thriving?" She found that the original font she chose made the H look like a U at a quick glance. To fix this, she used the polygon lasso tool to cut out the dash and move it higher up on the H to make it clearer to read quickly. When designing the posters, she experimented with different logos she had made. While they all worked nicely in different ways, the yellow speech bubble colors contrasted too much with her color scheme. So she changed the bubble's color to better fit the look of the posters.
The document discusses final merchandise options. It appears to be a note from Emily Shaw regarding merchandise items. In 3 sentences or less, it does not provide enough context to summarize the essential information or high level details of any merchandise options discussed.
The document is a logo mood board created by Emily Shaw. It contains visual examples of different logo designs, colors, fonts, and styles that could inspire the creation of a new logo. The mood board aims to showcase different design options and elements that may be incorporated into the logo design process.
Emily Shaw was creating campaign posters with the phrase "Surviving or Thriving?" and found that the original font's letter H looked like a U at a quick glance. She used the polygon lasso tool to cut out the dash in the H and move it higher up to make it clearer to read quickly. When adding logos to the posters, she experimented and found that while all worked nicely, the yellow speech bubble contrasted too much with the color scheme, so she changed the color to better fit the posters' look.
The document discusses final merchandise options. It appears to be a note from Emily Shaw regarding merchandise items. In 3 sentences or less, it does not provide enough context to summarize the essential information or high level details of any merchandise options discussed.
The cherry: beauty, softness, its heart-shaped plastic has inspired artists since Antiquity. Cherries and strawberries were considered the fruits of paradise and thus represented the souls of men.
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4. As this issue is the September issue the
colour scheme is very autumnal using fairly
warm toned colours ranging from the red
in the background to the orange text,
which then contrasts with the blue of the
coat to create more of a focal point in the
cover to draw the eyes to the main focus of
the cover which is the model.
The main masthead is slightly hidden by
the models head which is much like a lot of
vogue covers which helps to create some
kind of regular format for vogue front
covers. As well as this on the cover one of
the smaller subheadings uses the models
name to help attract her fans as it is the
orange font which draws attention too it.
Also due to the average reader of the
print copies of vogue being 34 years old
the colour schemes are quite classic to
autumn and very simple with no
overpowering bright, clashing colours
which would be more suited to a
younger audience. As well as this the
fonts on simplistic layout also represent
who the magazine is aimed at as the
cover looks very sophisticated and not
cramped and busy.
The photography for this cover will have
been shot in a studio like setting to achieve
this candid look even though it is being
posed for. As well as this due to the photo
being shot at a mid level/ eye level it helps
make it seem as if she is looking at the
audience as the eyes are looking straight
out and the bright blue colour of her eyes
is also reflected in the coat to help
enhance them. By having an eye level
image on the front cover it helps to entice
an audience, especially as his is a fashion
based magazine the fact that it is almost a
full body shot, and features a famous
current on trend model helps to reflect
what their audience requires from their
magazines, which may be anything from
fashion inspiration to tips and tricks.
This cover features quite a few numbers
and figures in the cover lines for example
he ‘7 trends’ piece would help entice
their audience to purchase the magazine
as vogue readers tend to spend more on
fashion every year than readers of
magazines such as Elle and Marie Claire
therefore these ‘7 trends’ may entice
them to buy the pieces that are in the 7
trends and interest them as an audience
as September I the start of the new
season of which trends will have
changed.
As well as this due to having 96% of
their readers being female and their
characteristics being ‘stylish’ and ‘luxury
consumers’ the cover lines specifically
target this audience by lines such as
‘most fashionable restaurant’ which
would encourage their readers to feel
the need to by stylish in the places they
choose to dine in and not only just their
appearance but making their daily life
reflect their fashion choices.
Due to 93% of their audience owning designer fashion it is
important for vogue to promote designer fashion trends
too them for example by them saying ‘The new look’
would suggest to their readers there are new trends
which they will need to by new clothing for to fit the
trends that they want to and stay stylish through autumn.
Although their audience is generally AB/ABC1 the language used crosses
over between both formal and casual to appeal to both ends of their
audience. The image used also reflects the date of issue due to it being a
more autumnal issue more warm toned orangey colours have been used
to portray which issue it is and what kind of look they are promoting that
month. The overall look of the magazine is A4 standard size but also has a
glossy cover to give a more classy and sophisticated look to the magazine
5. • In the latest December issue of Vogue the layout
on the inside varies quite a lot ranging from
pages that 90% text and only have one small
image all the way to a double page spread of one
image and one small caption to anchor the
image in relation to one of the articles. This
format throughout helps to keep the overall
internal appearance of the magazine just as
interesting as the cover and help keep their
audience interested. As well as this due to 93%
of their audience owning designer fashion and
94% of their audience owning luxury beauty
brands around 40-50% of the magazine is filled
with advertisements from a range of different
brands such as Estee Lauder and Dior.
• The magazine also has a lot of different features
to suit a wide variety of people ranging from tips
and tricks to model interviews and therefore this
suits the variety of people with in their target
audience. As well as this by including famous
models or artists in the magazine it draws in
their fans and can help Vogue widen their
audience slightly.
• Each of the images used in the magazine comes
with a small caption or quote to provide
anchorage and give meaning to the image to
display, either what is happening within the
image or a quote about the image. By doing this
it means that the images cannot be misleading
and taken the wrong way as it leaves little room
for interpretation.
• Within this magazine it features a lot of different
ranges in layout as some pages have images
which fill the page and in other cases they have a
page full of text with only a few images dotted
around the page to break up the text.
• As well as this they use a lot of shaded boxes
around some of the blocks of text on the more
busy pages and by doing this it helps to break up
the large amounts of text and draw the eyes to
the more important sections of text. Also they
use a few circles on this pages to highlight key
elements of the article or sections that would
draw a reader in.
• Another thing with this issue is that they have
used a lot of cool toned colours within thee
image and I think this is effective as it helps to
display this idea of winter and coldness and this
is shown throughout the December issue. Also
by doing this it helps reflect on the idea of winter
and how it is cold and this brings out the blue
and green tones throughout the magazine even
though the interview article has image which are
set in summer, they still use dark cold colours, as
her dress is black and and the background is also
made up of quite dark greens. However the
page which is made up of lots of smaller chunks
of text and images that directly reflect what is
being said also uses cool toned blues, beiges and
blacks which creates continuity throughout the
magazine and helps it flow.
• Within all the article the way it is written
variety's from quite casual and informal using
some slang in the first page which is made of the
little chats with various different people who
make the magazine, for example the editor, this
page is kept quite casual. On the other hand the
main feature of this issue is written with quite a
formal tone and doesn’t feature much slang. I
think by having this variety throughout helps to
make it a lot more personal but not too much as
though it doesn’t feel like you were reading a
magazine anymore. Also a other bonus from
doing this is that it suits both ends of there
target audience as the majority of their readers
are within the ABC1 category and by having this
variety of how it is written helps most people
within their target audience find something that
is suitable for them and in what style of writing
they would prefer whether they prefer it to be
very formal or very casual.
• Another thing that is used a lot within this issue
is the use of pull quotes to help break up the
large sections of text within the mains articles of
this issue.
6.
7.
8. NME have had a variety of styles over the past few years for example their
most recent issues have been very minimalistic and haven't had many if any
headlines. As the cover with slaves on the front simply has an image of them,
the NME logo scattered all over the page, and the name of the band with a
minor strap line, also on this cover there is the use of the yellow blob to draw
in peoples attention. Another thing about this cover is how they have used a
live candid image as apposed to a staged image in a studio like in their
previous older issues, by having a more live and interactive cover helps to link
back to their target audience as they have a fairly young adult market and this
can be seen in this cover due to the fact that it has a lot of young people
enjoying themselves on the cover and this may help entice other young people
who want to be involved in the same type of crowd. I think the live photo is
very effective as it makes the reader feel more involved especially as the lead
singer is looking towards he camera and it looks like a very intense scene and I
think this would help draw in new readers as it’s a very simple yet eye catching
cover.
In their older issues they went for a more busy and eye catching cover,
for example the Oasis cover has a lot of other information on it unlike
the slaves cover. Also on this cover they’ve used a more newspaper
headline like style using the reverse technique of having the white text
over the black background and makes it appear like more of a serious
headline within a magazine and this is effective at making it appear like
it’s the most important thing within that issue and people need to read
this as its using this bold font wit the plain black white and red colour
scheme making it even more eye catching. Also on this cover there is
hardly any white space as it is all filled up with either who features in
the magazine or brief descriptors of what is inside this issue. By having
clearly on the front of the issue what bands feature in this copy helps to
draw in their fans and therefor widen NME’s audience and help make
more sales as fans may catch sight that their favorite band features in
this magazine and that may make them purchase this issue. Also in this
issue I think the colour scheme of black, white and red keeps their logo
incorporated and has the stereotypical rock and roll colours and
therefor suits their audience well is it likely that someone who would
read this magazine enjoys that genre of music.
In the issue with Noel Gallagher on the cover incorporates the
interesting minimalistic look and the busy oasis cover and I think this
one is most effective and eye catching as it contains the details on who
is featured in the magazine, a controversial quote from him, and has
the large image, which is a head on shot and makes it feel as if he is
looking out at you and makes it a lot more attention grabbing. By
having a controversial quote on the cover it means that due to their
audience being predominantly young and male it may encourage them
to read the issue due to the ‘drama’ surrounding the controversial
quote.
Generally on the majority of NME covers they have a more
glossy look and appear more shiny than magazines such as
vogue. As well as this on most NME covers their is more
information on what features within the magazine and has
cover lines all around the images on the cover of the
magazine. Another noticeable thing about this magazine is
that the colour scheme they use is mostly very basic and sticks
to three main colours depending on what the main image on
the cover is, generally there's a black, white and red colour
scheme on most of them as well as this generally the NME
logo site in the top left corner of the magazine whether its in
front of the image or behind the image. I think by having the
logo in the same place on most of their issues it makes it more
memorable as you can imagine what the cover would look like
just from hearing the name NME if you have seen their
magazines before. As well as this the colours depend on what
type of artist is on the cover, when more rock/alternative
bands are on the cover the magazine uses a more darker
colour scheme is it more stereotypically matched with that
genre of music and dark colours are seen as a convention of
this type of music whereas when a more pop artist is on the
cover a lot brighter colours are used to represent the genre of
music which is being featured in that issue. Quite a direct
mode of address is used in quite a few covers of NME by using
images where it looks like the artist is looking at you, the
reader.
You can also see how the cover mainly targets a
predominantly male audience as in their key stats is shows
that 63% of their audience is male and I think this is shown in
the cover as they use the masculine colour scheme due to
them using this darker colour scheme it means that generally
a amore male audience will be drawn in and the words they
use on the covers and articles can be quite aggressive and
seen as more of a stereotypically male thing to say for
example on the Oasis issue the main headline is ‘Rocks
messiest bust ups’ meaning ‘messy’ arguments and the cover I
would say looks quite aggressive as the people on the cover
are looking as if they're trying to intimidate each other and
look quite angry and therefore I think you can tell that this
magazine is aimed towards a more male based audience.
9. This magazines is more article based which is
completely different to vogue as that magazine
featured predominantly more adverts than articles.
However this magazine does still contain some
promotions and adverts but not nearly half as much
as Vogue contains, due to it having less
advertisements this may also help draw in a younger
male audience as it is predominantly focused on the
music and not promoting random expensive products
throughout the magazine.
In almost every article in this magazine drop capitals
are used to start each article and have the
corresponding colour to one which features in the
main headline for example the burnt orange colour of
the ‘A’ in the Pete Doherty article s the same colour
that is used for the word ‘good’ in the headline and is
also the same colour as the bear. Another example of
this is in the Nicki Minaj article where the bright pink
of the drop capital is also used in the headline when is
says her name and it also matches the same colour as
her lipstick in the image.
Another noticeable thing about the article in NME is
that they almost always have one page which is
covered by and image, and this page will also either
contain a pull quote from the article like in the Pete
Doherty article and in the Liam Gallagher article both
a pull quote and anchorage is used so that the image
doesn't give any room for interpretation. Also by
including pull quotes it adds an more interesting look
to the article and also gives and insight in what the
article is about without someone having the read the
whole article.
In NME magazines there are generally too kind of
looks for the main articles and that is either to have
them in an interview format like in the Nicki Minaj
article where all the ‘Gospel’ is laid out in number
order. Or like in the two other articles where its one
large image on the left hand page and then on the
right hand page is where all the most important
information from the article is put in generally 3
columns which include a pull quote either in the
middle of the article or at he top covering the top
third of the page.
The articles within NME magazines are quite
informal and can sometimes feature
swearing as their general target audience is
25 year old males and therefore is written
like a 25 year old male and is very informal
and can sometimes be either direct or
indirect depending on the style of the article
or interview therefore this is an effective
way of engaging with their audience as it
feels more personal and like its just a chat
with a friend therefore this may be why it is
so popular among young males.
In almost every article staged , studio images
are used and they are generally head on
shots where the artist appears to be looking
directly at the reader and make them feel
more included like in all the image in these
three covers all the artists are looking
directly forwards as if they are engaging with
the reader.
I think that by having this continuity
throughout each and everyone of their
articles it makes them more easily noticeable
to NME fans and also its a simple layout for
readers to follow without it being boring and
looking repetitive so that every issue looks
the same. Also throughout each issue NME
aim to get self promotion through the bands
or artists that they feature for example with
the Liam Gallagher article it the main
headline for that article is about him, buying
NME when every new issue comes out no
matter what, by doing this it makes the fans
of that band or artist more likely to purchase
the magazine weekly to feel as they're the
same as their favourite artists and makes
them feel like they have something in
common with that artist.