Mercury magazine was influenced by the conventions of Kerrang magazine, including banners, cover models obscuring the masthead, and bar codes with issue details. The layout uses conventions like sidebars with page numbers and titles, and larger feature articles. The content targets 16-25 year olds of both genders interested in a variety of music genres and the music industry. To attract this audience, the magazine uses eye-catching covers, competitions, informal language, and appropriate images.
A photoshoot is scheduled for March 17th featuring the band Selassie Charles Mawuli Charles. A high-angle, tilted shot will be taken of both models on a white staircase to give an interesting warped effect. Natural light from windows will be used due to the limited space preventing flash usage. One model will hold an electric guitar and stand while the other sits nearby. The casual clothing of both should look cool but branding may need cloning out due to copyright.
The document analyzes a double page spread from the magazine Kerrang featuring the band Enter Shikari. It discusses various design elements of the spread including the targeting of its alternative rock audience, use of language specific to rock music culture, layout with a mix of large images and brief text, and style that presents the band as iconic figures of rebellion through their appearance and quoted comments about rowdy live shows. The tone suggests addressing readers as informed fans in an "in crowd" through insider terminology and assumption of background knowledge about the featured band and genre.
The document discusses ideas for layout of a double-page spread (DPS) magazine spread. Several layout designs are presented and revised to improve organization and flow. The final design features a large main photo on the left side with models positioned to avoid the middle crease, leaving white space on the right for article text. This solves prior issues while allowing more text than images, which some readers may find intimidating.
The document provides details for an additional photoshoot with four models: Gina Kayali, Ama Charles, Magne, Sonia Naqvi, Heliena Hagos, and Laura Franklin. It specifies the shot type, lighting, background, and positioning for each model, as well as potential editing details. The shoot will include mid shots, close-ups, and portraits taken outdoors, indoors, and at night using natural light, flash, and macro lenses depending on the situation. Backgrounds will include walls, parks, and interior rooms. Photos will be positioned in the double page spread, sidebar, and as portraits. Minimal editing is planned besides potential skin or contrast adjustments
The document provides details for a cover photoshoot including the model, shot type, lighting, background, and positioning on the cover. Gina Kayali will be photographed from a mid or low angle in natural light in a shaded area without macro or flash. She will take up most of the frame against an unimportant background. Her image will be the main masthead photo on the cover surrounded by coverlines and text. Minor editing may remove blemishes and adjust background lighting.
Mercury magazine was influenced by the conventions of Kerrang magazine, including banners, cover models obscuring the masthead, and bar codes with issue details. The layout uses conventions like sidebars with page numbers and titles, and larger feature articles. The content targets 16-25 year olds of both genders interested in a variety of music genres and the music industry. To attract this audience, the magazine uses eye-catching covers, competitions, informal language, and appropriate images.
A photoshoot is scheduled for March 17th featuring the band Selassie Charles Mawuli Charles. A high-angle, tilted shot will be taken of both models on a white staircase to give an interesting warped effect. Natural light from windows will be used due to the limited space preventing flash usage. One model will hold an electric guitar and stand while the other sits nearby. The casual clothing of both should look cool but branding may need cloning out due to copyright.
The document analyzes a double page spread from the magazine Kerrang featuring the band Enter Shikari. It discusses various design elements of the spread including the targeting of its alternative rock audience, use of language specific to rock music culture, layout with a mix of large images and brief text, and style that presents the band as iconic figures of rebellion through their appearance and quoted comments about rowdy live shows. The tone suggests addressing readers as informed fans in an "in crowd" through insider terminology and assumption of background knowledge about the featured band and genre.
The document discusses ideas for layout of a double-page spread (DPS) magazine spread. Several layout designs are presented and revised to improve organization and flow. The final design features a large main photo on the left side with models positioned to avoid the middle crease, leaving white space on the right for article text. This solves prior issues while allowing more text than images, which some readers may find intimidating.
The document provides details for an additional photoshoot with four models: Gina Kayali, Ama Charles, Magne, Sonia Naqvi, Heliena Hagos, and Laura Franklin. It specifies the shot type, lighting, background, and positioning for each model, as well as potential editing details. The shoot will include mid shots, close-ups, and portraits taken outdoors, indoors, and at night using natural light, flash, and macro lenses depending on the situation. Backgrounds will include walls, parks, and interior rooms. Photos will be positioned in the double page spread, sidebar, and as portraits. Minimal editing is planned besides potential skin or contrast adjustments
The document provides details for a cover photoshoot including the model, shot type, lighting, background, and positioning on the cover. Gina Kayali will be photographed from a mid or low angle in natural light in a shaded area without macro or flash. She will take up most of the frame against an unimportant background. Her image will be the main masthead photo on the cover surrounded by coverlines and text. Minor editing may remove blemishes and adjust background lighting.
This document contains the results of a survey about music magazine preferences. The top three music genres listened to are hip hop, rock, and indie. The most read magazines are Kerrang, Q, and NME. Most respondents would buy a magazine monthly and enjoy artist interviews, latest music news, and a variety of genres in a magazine. Most would pay £3.50-£3.99 and prefer the color scheme of black and purple. The majority were aged 16-18 and preferred font 4 for the magazine masthead.
This document appears to be a music magazine questionnaire. It asks respondents about their music preferences, magazine reading habits, desired features and pricing. Key details include that most listen to hip hop or pop music, read Kerrang or Q magazines, enjoy artist interviews and reviews in magazines, and prefer color schemes of black and purple or black and white.
The document appears to be a music magazine questionnaire. It asks respondents about their music preferences, magazine reading habits, and preferences regarding magazine features, pricing, design, and fonts. Key results include that most respondents listen to hip hop or rock music, read Kerrang or NME magazine, and enjoy artist interviews and event information in magazines. Most would pay £3.50-£3.99 and prefer the purple and white or black and purple color schemes and Font 4 for the masthead.
The document summarizes the results of a questionnaire about music magazine preferences. Based on the results, the creator will:
1) Focus on alternative music as the most popular genre and also include some coverage of different language music.
2) Publish the magazine monthly as most respondents said they would buy it monthly.
3) Feature artist/band interviews prominently based on it being the most popular content choice.
4) Price the magazine at £3.50 to appeal to most respondents who chose between £2.50-£2.99 and £3.50-£3.99.
The document is a questionnaire about music magazine preferences. It asks respondents about their favorite music genres, magazines read, purchase frequency of magazines, favorite magazine features, preferred price range and color schemes, age range, and font preference for magazine titles. The majority of respondents listen to alternative music, read NME magazine monthly, enjoy artist interviews and reviews in magazines, and would pay £3.50-£3.99 for a magazine.
This document is a survey about music magazine preferences. It asks respondents about their music tastes, favorite artists, magazines read, purchase frequency, enjoyed features, willingness to pay, preferred color schemes, gender, age, and preferred font for the magazine title. The questions gather demographic information and opinions to help inform the creation and marketing of a new music magazine.
The document outlines a media studies project plan with tasks from November 2009 to March 2009, including creating questionnaires, analyzing existing magazine elements, producing mockups and drafts of a front cover, table of contents, and double page spread, gathering feedback, and finalizing and presenting the project.
This document is a survey about music magazine preferences. It asks respondents about their music tastes, favorite artists, magazines read, purchase frequency, enjoyed features, willingness to pay, preferred color schemes, gender, age, and preferred font for the magazine title. The questions gather information on demographics and opinions to help inform the creation and marketing of a music magazine.
This survey aims to gather information about music magazine readers' music preferences, reading habits, and opinions on magazine features and design. Respondents are asked about the types of music they listen to, their favorite bands and magazines, purchase frequency, enjoyed content types, willingness to pay, preferred color schemes, gender, and age. They are also able to provide feedback on their preferred font for the magazine title.
The document summarizes the results of a questionnaire about music magazine preferences. Based on the results, the magazine will focus on alternative music and mention some foreign language music. It will be published monthly to reduce costs. The main feature will be artist/band interviews. The magazine will be priced at £3.50 and have a black and purple color scheme targeting 16-18 year olds. The masthead font will be Inked God.
The document is a survey about music magazine preferences. It asks respondents about the type of music they listen to, their favorite bands, which music magazines they read and how often, what features they enjoy in music magazines, how much they are willing to pay, their preferred color schemes and fonts. It collects demographic information like gender and age as well. The survey aims to understand readers' tastes to help music magazines better target their audience.
The document is a survey about music magazine preferences. It asks respondents about the type of music they listen to, their favorite bands, which music magazines they read and how often, what sections they enjoy in music magazines, how much they are willing to pay, preferred color schemes, gender, age, and preferred font for the magazine title. The survey collects both multiple choice and open-ended answers about readers' music tastes and preferences for music magazine content and design.
The document summarizes the author's evaluation of a magazine cover they created. It follows conventions like including a masthead and rule of thirds layout. It aims to represent sixth form students at a particular school without focusing on any social group. The intended audience is both male and female sixth form students at that school. In creating the magazine cover, the author learned skills like photo editing in Photoshop and using blogging platforms.
The document discusses the planning process for a magazine cover. It describes choosing a cover image featuring Shelby Yearwood, a student at another school, to interview about her experiences. Most of the text will be on the left third to attract readers' glances. Coverlines in various colors and fonts will promote what's inside rather than just the image. The casual, outdoor setting aims to connect with readers. The masthead font will be interesting and recognizable as the magazine's style.
The magazine cover features a blonde model making eye contact with the reader against a black, red, and white background. The sans serif fonts make the text clear and simple. Madonna's name is featured prominently in bright red and large font to draw attention, as the magazine is proud to have her on the cover and for an interview, given her global fame. The bold and simple masthead is never changed and easily recognizable, sometimes appearing behind the main image.
This document provides instructions for using the cloning tool in photo editing software to remove logos or other copyrighted elements from images. It explains that the cloning tool works by selecting an area to clone from, holding alt and clicking to sample that area, then clicking where you want to clone that sample to copy it. The user may need to resample multiple times and be careful not to clone unintended areas.
This document provides instructions for using the cloning tool in photo editing software to remove logos or other copyrighted elements from images. It explains that the cloning tool works by selecting an area to clone from, holding alt and clicking to sample that area, then clicking where you want to clone that sample to copy it. The user may need to resample multiple times and be careful not to clone unintended areas.
The student went to the National History Museum to take photos related to previous artwork and artists as part of a homework assignment. They photographed crocodile skin which related to a collage they had seen, dinosaur exhibits to draw from interesting angles, and a seahorse's texture connecting to a piece called "Horse of Jewels". They also took a photo of the inside of a dinosaur's leg to relate to previous consideration of using animal fur and meat as clothing.
This document contains the results of a survey about music magazine preferences. The top three music genres listened to are hip hop, rock, and indie. The most read magazines are Kerrang, Q, and NME. Most respondents would buy a magazine monthly and enjoy artist interviews, latest music news, and a variety of genres in a magazine. Most would pay £3.50-£3.99 and prefer the color scheme of black and purple. The majority were aged 16-18 and preferred font 4 for the magazine masthead.
This document appears to be a music magazine questionnaire. It asks respondents about their music preferences, magazine reading habits, desired features and pricing. Key details include that most listen to hip hop or pop music, read Kerrang or Q magazines, enjoy artist interviews and reviews in magazines, and prefer color schemes of black and purple or black and white.
The document appears to be a music magazine questionnaire. It asks respondents about their music preferences, magazine reading habits, and preferences regarding magazine features, pricing, design, and fonts. Key results include that most respondents listen to hip hop or rock music, read Kerrang or NME magazine, and enjoy artist interviews and event information in magazines. Most would pay £3.50-£3.99 and prefer the purple and white or black and purple color schemes and Font 4 for the masthead.
The document summarizes the results of a questionnaire about music magazine preferences. Based on the results, the creator will:
1) Focus on alternative music as the most popular genre and also include some coverage of different language music.
2) Publish the magazine monthly as most respondents said they would buy it monthly.
3) Feature artist/band interviews prominently based on it being the most popular content choice.
4) Price the magazine at £3.50 to appeal to most respondents who chose between £2.50-£2.99 and £3.50-£3.99.
The document is a questionnaire about music magazine preferences. It asks respondents about their favorite music genres, magazines read, purchase frequency of magazines, favorite magazine features, preferred price range and color schemes, age range, and font preference for magazine titles. The majority of respondents listen to alternative music, read NME magazine monthly, enjoy artist interviews and reviews in magazines, and would pay £3.50-£3.99 for a magazine.
This document is a survey about music magazine preferences. It asks respondents about their music tastes, favorite artists, magazines read, purchase frequency, enjoyed features, willingness to pay, preferred color schemes, gender, age, and preferred font for the magazine title. The questions gather demographic information and opinions to help inform the creation and marketing of a new music magazine.
The document outlines a media studies project plan with tasks from November 2009 to March 2009, including creating questionnaires, analyzing existing magazine elements, producing mockups and drafts of a front cover, table of contents, and double page spread, gathering feedback, and finalizing and presenting the project.
This document is a survey about music magazine preferences. It asks respondents about their music tastes, favorite artists, magazines read, purchase frequency, enjoyed features, willingness to pay, preferred color schemes, gender, age, and preferred font for the magazine title. The questions gather information on demographics and opinions to help inform the creation and marketing of a music magazine.
This survey aims to gather information about music magazine readers' music preferences, reading habits, and opinions on magazine features and design. Respondents are asked about the types of music they listen to, their favorite bands and magazines, purchase frequency, enjoyed content types, willingness to pay, preferred color schemes, gender, and age. They are also able to provide feedback on their preferred font for the magazine title.
The document summarizes the results of a questionnaire about music magazine preferences. Based on the results, the magazine will focus on alternative music and mention some foreign language music. It will be published monthly to reduce costs. The main feature will be artist/band interviews. The magazine will be priced at £3.50 and have a black and purple color scheme targeting 16-18 year olds. The masthead font will be Inked God.
The document is a survey about music magazine preferences. It asks respondents about the type of music they listen to, their favorite bands, which music magazines they read and how often, what features they enjoy in music magazines, how much they are willing to pay, their preferred color schemes and fonts. It collects demographic information like gender and age as well. The survey aims to understand readers' tastes to help music magazines better target their audience.
The document is a survey about music magazine preferences. It asks respondents about the type of music they listen to, their favorite bands, which music magazines they read and how often, what sections they enjoy in music magazines, how much they are willing to pay, preferred color schemes, gender, age, and preferred font for the magazine title. The survey collects both multiple choice and open-ended answers about readers' music tastes and preferences for music magazine content and design.
The document summarizes the author's evaluation of a magazine cover they created. It follows conventions like including a masthead and rule of thirds layout. It aims to represent sixth form students at a particular school without focusing on any social group. The intended audience is both male and female sixth form students at that school. In creating the magazine cover, the author learned skills like photo editing in Photoshop and using blogging platforms.
The document discusses the planning process for a magazine cover. It describes choosing a cover image featuring Shelby Yearwood, a student at another school, to interview about her experiences. Most of the text will be on the left third to attract readers' glances. Coverlines in various colors and fonts will promote what's inside rather than just the image. The casual, outdoor setting aims to connect with readers. The masthead font will be interesting and recognizable as the magazine's style.
The magazine cover features a blonde model making eye contact with the reader against a black, red, and white background. The sans serif fonts make the text clear and simple. Madonna's name is featured prominently in bright red and large font to draw attention, as the magazine is proud to have her on the cover and for an interview, given her global fame. The bold and simple masthead is never changed and easily recognizable, sometimes appearing behind the main image.
This document provides instructions for using the cloning tool in photo editing software to remove logos or other copyrighted elements from images. It explains that the cloning tool works by selecting an area to clone from, holding alt and clicking to sample that area, then clicking where you want to clone that sample to copy it. The user may need to resample multiple times and be careful not to clone unintended areas.
This document provides instructions for using the cloning tool in photo editing software to remove logos or other copyrighted elements from images. It explains that the cloning tool works by selecting an area to clone from, holding alt and clicking to sample that area, then clicking where you want to clone that sample to copy it. The user may need to resample multiple times and be careful not to clone unintended areas.
The student went to the National History Museum to take photos related to previous artwork and artists as part of a homework assignment. They photographed crocodile skin which related to a collage they had seen, dinosaur exhibits to draw from interesting angles, and a seahorse's texture connecting to a piece called "Horse of Jewels". They also took a photo of the inside of a dinosaur's leg to relate to previous consideration of using animal fur and meat as clothing.