This document shows the layout plan for a magazine called "Notorious". It consists of 160 pages with content arranged across two columns on each page. The magazine contains editorial content such as articles as well as advertisements for clothing, cosmetics, footwear, drinks, food and promotions for musicians. Most of the pages are filled with multiple advertisements, with some pages dedicated to promotions, contents pages and the editor's column.
The document outlines the production process and schedule for creating a magazine. It involves deciding on a publication date, managing the production schedule, making editorial and budget decisions, acquiring content from in-house and external writers, sub-editing for quality control, page layout, proofreading, sending the file to the printer, distribution, and setting the release date and frequency. The production manager must properly manage the schedule to meet deadlines and allow for mistakes. Content acquisition is a key step, involving both in-house and external writers as well as artwork and graphics. The schedule provides checkpoints for completing each stage of the process by certain dates to ensure the magazine is published on time.
This document provides details of the planning and research completed for a music magazine project. It includes:
1. Step-by-step progressions of the preliminary front cover and contents page, outlining the design process.
2. Research on the target audience and conventions of music magazines. Key details researched include the demographics and socio-economic status of typical readers, as well as common magazine elements.
3. Research on established music magazines (Q and NME) and their publishers, focusing on conventions, target audiences, and business strategies like pricing and distribution.
TJ Salango is planning photo shoots for a school portfolio and identifies three potential locations: the school, a town/park, and their home. At the school, they can use the photography studio and meet with classmates as models during free periods, but coordinating schedules may be difficult. The town/park allow flexibility to meet and photograph people, but lighting control and privacy would be limited. Shooting at home provides lighting control and privacy, but a limited variety of people to photograph. Permission is needed from the school teacher, public spaces require consent, and home shoots require participant consent. The document evaluates each location's logistics, permissions, risks, and suitability for the planned photo portfolio.
- The document is a schedule created by Thomas Jericho Salango, a student numbered 1220, for their Foundation Portfolio in Media Studies unit.
- Over several weeks, Thomas worked on preliminary tasks like magazine analysis and target audience research before beginning their preliminary front cover and contents page designs.
- After completing preliminary designs, Thomas spent multiple lessons working on their main task front cover and contents page designs, inspired by the VIBE magazine. They added various design elements and refined their work.
- By the end of the scheduled period, Thomas had completed preliminary and main task designs for their front cover and contents page for their school magazine coursework.
This document is a mood board created by TJ Salango with candidate number 1220 for a magazine planning unit. The mood board aims to visually represent the tone, style, and themes that will be featured in the planned magazine. In a concise visual format, the mood board provides inspiration and guidance for the magazine's direction.
This document is a prop list created by Thomas Jericho Salango for his media foundation portfolio. It lists props he plans to use such as headphones, bandanas, hoodies, bling, tattoos, guns, drugs, street art, caps, and makeup. These props are intended to represent themes of urban lifestyle, wealth, crime, and rebellion inspired by celebrity rappers. Photoshop will be used to add effects and edit photographs. A camera, tripod, and costumes are also listed to help create high quality images for the magazine.
This document provides a textual analysis of the contents page and double page spread (DPS) of a music magazine. It summarizes the key elements of the magazine layout including the subline, main image, magazine credits, sub-headings, pull quote, stand first, drop capital, and reasons for including these elements. The analysis explains how each element engages the reader and represents the celebrity featured, following conventions like Richard Dyer's Star Image Theory. It also notes design considerations for the elements like font, sizing, coloring and positioning.
This document shows the layout plan for a magazine called "Notorious". It consists of 160 pages with content arranged across two columns on each page. The magazine contains editorial content such as articles as well as advertisements for clothing, cosmetics, footwear, drinks, food and promotions for musicians. Most of the pages are filled with multiple advertisements, with some pages dedicated to promotions, contents pages and the editor's column.
The document outlines the production process and schedule for creating a magazine. It involves deciding on a publication date, managing the production schedule, making editorial and budget decisions, acquiring content from in-house and external writers, sub-editing for quality control, page layout, proofreading, sending the file to the printer, distribution, and setting the release date and frequency. The production manager must properly manage the schedule to meet deadlines and allow for mistakes. Content acquisition is a key step, involving both in-house and external writers as well as artwork and graphics. The schedule provides checkpoints for completing each stage of the process by certain dates to ensure the magazine is published on time.
This document provides details of the planning and research completed for a music magazine project. It includes:
1. Step-by-step progressions of the preliminary front cover and contents page, outlining the design process.
2. Research on the target audience and conventions of music magazines. Key details researched include the demographics and socio-economic status of typical readers, as well as common magazine elements.
3. Research on established music magazines (Q and NME) and their publishers, focusing on conventions, target audiences, and business strategies like pricing and distribution.
TJ Salango is planning photo shoots for a school portfolio and identifies three potential locations: the school, a town/park, and their home. At the school, they can use the photography studio and meet with classmates as models during free periods, but coordinating schedules may be difficult. The town/park allow flexibility to meet and photograph people, but lighting control and privacy would be limited. Shooting at home provides lighting control and privacy, but a limited variety of people to photograph. Permission is needed from the school teacher, public spaces require consent, and home shoots require participant consent. The document evaluates each location's logistics, permissions, risks, and suitability for the planned photo portfolio.
- The document is a schedule created by Thomas Jericho Salango, a student numbered 1220, for their Foundation Portfolio in Media Studies unit.
- Over several weeks, Thomas worked on preliminary tasks like magazine analysis and target audience research before beginning their preliminary front cover and contents page designs.
- After completing preliminary designs, Thomas spent multiple lessons working on their main task front cover and contents page designs, inspired by the VIBE magazine. They added various design elements and refined their work.
- By the end of the scheduled period, Thomas had completed preliminary and main task designs for their front cover and contents page for their school magazine coursework.
This document is a mood board created by TJ Salango with candidate number 1220 for a magazine planning unit. The mood board aims to visually represent the tone, style, and themes that will be featured in the planned magazine. In a concise visual format, the mood board provides inspiration and guidance for the magazine's direction.
This document is a prop list created by Thomas Jericho Salango for his media foundation portfolio. It lists props he plans to use such as headphones, bandanas, hoodies, bling, tattoos, guns, drugs, street art, caps, and makeup. These props are intended to represent themes of urban lifestyle, wealth, crime, and rebellion inspired by celebrity rappers. Photoshop will be used to add effects and edit photographs. A camera, tripod, and costumes are also listed to help create high quality images for the magazine.
This document provides a textual analysis of the contents page and double page spread (DPS) of a music magazine. It summarizes the key elements of the magazine layout including the subline, main image, magazine credits, sub-headings, pull quote, stand first, drop capital, and reasons for including these elements. The analysis explains how each element engages the reader and represents the celebrity featured, following conventions like Richard Dyer's Star Image Theory. It also notes design considerations for the elements like font, sizing, coloring and positioning.