This document summarizes a magazine proposal for a monthly music magazine titled "Prime of Sound" aimed at teenagers and young adults. The magazine will cover rock and pop music genres as these were found to be the most popular in a survey. It will be released monthly to allow more time for writing and publishing. The price will be £1.99 per issue. The proposal discusses naming the magazine, choosing colors and fonts, creating a flat plan, setting measurements, distribution plans, costs, production plans and sample photographs for the cover.
The document describes the development of a music magazine called "Spotlight" targeted towards teens and young adult women aged 16-25. Key details include:
- The magazine's masthead name "Spotlight" was chosen to match the genres of pop and R&B featured in stories and music downloads.
- The front cover features an interview with a rising 23-year old artist named Jayde Allison to appeal to the target audience.
- Color, fonts, images and topics were carefully selected throughout the magazine to attract and engage readers.
- The tagline "out with the old and in with the new" was chosen to convey the magazine's focus on the newest music trends each issue.
This document discusses the conventions used in magazine design and evaluates how the author applied conventions in their own magazine design project. Key points include:
- Popular magazines follow certain conventions like the Gutenberg diagram and masthead placement that increase sales and professional appearance.
- The author's magazine cover and layout mimics conventions from Rolling Stone magazine to appear more professional, including placement of cover lines and masthead.
- Interior pages also apply conventions like use of images, pull quotes, consistent branding, and layout structures to engage readers and maintain cohesion.
- The author analyzes whether their magazine cover may attract the intended audience and discusses potential institutional partners to help promote the magazine.
This document analyzes the layout and design elements of a magazine page. It discusses features like drop caps, images, text styling, logos, mastheads and other graphical elements. These elements are intended to attract readers' attention, highlight important information, provide context and establish a consistent visual style. The goal is to engage readers, help them understand the content at a glance, and ultimately increase magazine sales and readership.
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 summarizes the design elements used on the cover of the NME magazine. It notes that the main colors are bold red, black and white which allow the masthead and lead article to stand out. The central image is in black and white giving it a traditional feel. Sans serif font is used throughout to convey an informal tone appropriate for the target audience.
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 analyzes magazine covers and contents pages from different genres including rock, classical, and R&B magazines. It discusses design elements like mastheads, images, fonts, and color schemes used across the different magazines. Specific magazines analyzed include Kerrang!, Vibe, and a classical music magazine. The document also includes a questionnaire about magazine preferences and what was learned from the results, which is that audiences value high quality magazines and are willing to pay more for them.
Music Magazine Survey: Analysis of resultstashaay27
- The majority of respondents to the music magazine survey were teenagers aged 13-18, showing this is the target audience.
- Most respondents listened to rock, alternative, and heavy metal music and did not prefer classical or jazz.
- Females responded to the survey more than males, indicating the magazine should focus more on genres and artists appealing to females.
- Respondents listened to music frequently, for 3+ hours per day, showing they are passionate about music and will be interested in a music magazine.
The document describes the development of a music magazine called "Spotlight" targeted towards teens and young adult women aged 16-25. Key details include:
- The magazine's masthead name "Spotlight" was chosen to match the genres of pop and R&B featured in stories and music downloads.
- The front cover features an interview with a rising 23-year old artist named Jayde Allison to appeal to the target audience.
- Color, fonts, images and topics were carefully selected throughout the magazine to attract and engage readers.
- The tagline "out with the old and in with the new" was chosen to convey the magazine's focus on the newest music trends each issue.
This document discusses the conventions used in magazine design and evaluates how the author applied conventions in their own magazine design project. Key points include:
- Popular magazines follow certain conventions like the Gutenberg diagram and masthead placement that increase sales and professional appearance.
- The author's magazine cover and layout mimics conventions from Rolling Stone magazine to appear more professional, including placement of cover lines and masthead.
- Interior pages also apply conventions like use of images, pull quotes, consistent branding, and layout structures to engage readers and maintain cohesion.
- The author analyzes whether their magazine cover may attract the intended audience and discusses potential institutional partners to help promote the magazine.
This document analyzes the layout and design elements of a magazine page. It discusses features like drop caps, images, text styling, logos, mastheads and other graphical elements. These elements are intended to attract readers' attention, highlight important information, provide context and establish a consistent visual style. The goal is to engage readers, help them understand the content at a glance, and ultimately increase magazine sales and readership.
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 summarizes the design elements used on the cover of the NME magazine. It notes that the main colors are bold red, black and white which allow the masthead and lead article to stand out. The central image is in black and white giving it a traditional feel. Sans serif font is used throughout to convey an informal tone appropriate for the target audience.
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 analyzes magazine covers and contents pages from different genres including rock, classical, and R&B magazines. It discusses design elements like mastheads, images, fonts, and color schemes used across the different magazines. Specific magazines analyzed include Kerrang!, Vibe, and a classical music magazine. The document also includes a questionnaire about magazine preferences and what was learned from the results, which is that audiences value high quality magazines and are willing to pay more for them.
Music Magazine Survey: Analysis of resultstashaay27
- The majority of respondents to the music magazine survey were teenagers aged 13-18, showing this is the target audience.
- Most respondents listened to rock, alternative, and heavy metal music and did not prefer classical or jazz.
- Females responded to the survey more than males, indicating the magazine should focus more on genres and artists appealing to females.
- Respondents listened to music frequently, for 3+ hours per day, showing they are passionate about music and will be interested in a music magazine.
The document provides an analysis of the media conventions used, challenged, and developed in the creation of the author's music magazine. It summarizes the key influences and design choices, including taking inspiration from the layout, fonts, and cover conventions of magazines like Loud and Quiet and Q while also making adaptations suited to their intended audience of late teenagers to middle-aged adults. Examples of challenged conventions included using fewer images and a non-strict color scheme to achieve a simpler, more modern style. The author analyzes how their magazine represents young to middle-aged adults through its indie music genre focus, formal fonts and colors, and minimalistic photography and clothing styles featured.
The document provides guidelines for designing the front cover of a music magazine, comparing the conventions used in other magazines. It notes that most conventions are followed, such as using text layering, excluding text in front of the model, and using cover lines to show contents. However, it breaks from having the model look at the reader, instead showing them working, to fit the magazine's focus on music for film and TV. Sticking closely to conventions helps potential readers recognize it as a music magazine, but some breaks from convention can be justified to better represent the magazine's topic.
The document discusses the conventions used in magazine design that the author's music magazine follows, such as including a model on the cover looking at the reader, using text layers for depth, and promoting offers; it also explains some conventions the magazine breaks like having the model working instead of looking at the reader. The author believes following most conventions helps the magazine be recognizable while small breaks in convention add uniqueness.
The document provides details about the design of a magazine cover and contents page. It discusses design elements like the masthead, fonts, images, and colors used on the cover. It notes the target audience is 17+ year olds and the magazine aims to portray women in a positive, empowered light rather than focusing on their appearance or conforming to stereotypes. The contents page layout includes sections, a logo, issue date, pull quotes, and social media links following conventions but with a minimal design to focus on the message of empowering women in the music industry.
The document discusses how the media product, a music magazine, represents and conforms to conventions of real music magazines while also trying to be unique.
The summary discusses using conventions like mastheads, house styles, prices, and layouts similarly to magazines like NME and Kerrang. Photos and articles also conform to expectations but try to challenge stereotypes. Representation of various social groups is discussed through inclusion of male and female interviews and photos from music festivals. Overall, the magazine aims to be familiar yet independent for its target 16-21 year old audience.
The document is an evaluation of a student's media magazine product. It summarizes how the magazine uses conventions of real teen pop magazines in its format and design.
The student conducted research on existing teen pop magazines to inform the design of their magazine. Key conventions that were adopted include using bright colors, informal fonts, pull quotes, and prominent images of artists on the cover and contents page.
The evaluation also notes some ways the student challenged conventions, such as using fewer images on the contents page to reduce clutter, and including fewer fashion references on the cover to focus attention on the music.
Media Evaluation Question 3: What have you learnt from your audience feedback?charlotteseal123
The document describes a student's music magazine project. The student created the magazine independently, taking all photographs and editing them for inclusion. The target audience was females aged 15+ and the magazine focused on chart music. Inspiration was drawn from Q Magazine for its similar genre and conventions like prominent cover photos. The contents page included competitions, photos and an editor's letter to engage readers. A feature article on a band splitting up used bright photos, subheadings and questions to grab attention. The student learned new skills in photography, editing and desktop publishing software to create the magazine.
This magazine cover features Cheryl Cole as the main image. The large main cover line "Cheryl Cole rocks" engages readers about what may be said about her in the magazine. Additional cover lines in red and white text advertise other music artists and stories featured inside. The masthead at the top identifies this as issue of "Q" magazine.
The document discusses the design and layout of a student magazine called "REVERSE". It aims to attract a young male and female audience interested in indie/punk music. The front cover features a photo of a band called "Wolves" to draw attention. The contents page stands out with diagonally arranged images and rotated text. Feedback from test surveys was positive, showing the magazine successfully conveyed the intended casual, eye-catching style while providing enough information.
This document summarizes and evaluates the front cover and double page spread of a student-created magazine focused on pop music. On the front cover, the student uses bright pink and blue colors in the masthead and cover lines to match the pop genre. Images of musicians and cover lines about celebrities are used to appeal to the target teenage female audience. Bold anchorage text introduces the main artists. On the double page spread, black and white images of the artists scrolling along the top provide contrast. A pink masthead and quote box in the center engage readers in the interview content. Overall, the document analyzes design choices and how they appeal to and attract the intended readership.
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.
The document summarizes how the author's magazine product represents and conforms to conventions of real music magazines while also trying to challenge some conventions. The summary uses conventions like mastheads, covers, layouts, and content from magazines like NME and Kerrang as references. It also discusses representing various social groups like gender and ages to appeal to different audiences. Overall, the author aims to create a magazine that feels unique but is still recognizable to their target audience of 16-21 year olds interested in indie music.
This document is Harry Frampton's log book, evaluation, and preliminary tasks for his music magazine production project. Some key points:
- Harry chose design elements like the green gradient and band font to create brand recognition for the band featured on the cover.
- Conventions from established magazines like NME, DIY, and Q were replicated, such as the short masthead "inD" and contents page layout, to attract readers familiar with those publications.
- Cover lines, images, and articles featured both well-known and smaller indie bands to appeal to fans across experience levels.
- Social media integration and a ticket giveaway were included to draw in younger readers.
- Layout
The document summarizes the process of evaluating existing magazines to help design a new music magazine. Key points analyzed include covers, color schemes, fonts, photo editing, conventions, target audiences, and potential distributors. Existing magazines provided inspiration on techniques like limited color palettes, prominent mastheads, and featuring artists to represent the genre. The goal was to create an eye-catching cover that established the magazine while appealing to both male and female readers across various music interests and ages.
The document discusses forms and conventions in media products. It then summarizes the key forms and conventions used in the student's magazine cover and contents page design.
For the cover, conventions like masthead placement, selling lines, date/price/issue info, barcodes, additional images and cover lines are followed. The largest central photo, headline styles, and pull quotes are also conventional.
For the contents page, conventions like masthead/logo, page numbers, subheadings, brief descriptions, column structure, and use of a large central photo are followed. Graphics and a range of smaller photos are also used conventionally. The design draws inspiration from other magazines' styles.
Rhia De Carlo, a singer who won Britain's Got Talent with her band, has received a contract to become a solo artist in Los Angeles that could make her millions, but it would require leaving her bandmates. She has until December 27th to decide whether to take the contract or remain with her band, risking a decline in fame and earnings. Rhia's website has set up a poll for fans to vote on whether she should stay with her band or leave for her solo opportunity.
This document contains details of planning and pitching two print-based music magazines called VOLUME and Prime of Sound. It includes mood boards, proposals, and details on the magazines' target audiences, genres, colors, names, and marketing strategies. For VOLUME, the target audience is teenagers and young adults aged 13+, the main color is orange, and the genre is R&B, pop, and hip hop. For Prime of Sound, the target audience is 12+ and the magazine will compete with Q Magazine by repeating some of its successful aspects.
This document discusses preparations for a pitch, including ensuring the room, computer, projector, remote, and screen are all working properly in advance. The presenter wants to leave time to set everything up and practice with the remote to avoid technical difficulties during the actual pitch.
The document provides details of Tom Evenden's planning and pitching of a print-based media product. It includes slides covering feedback, survey results, budget plans, production schedules, legal issues, intellectual property, photography plans, and hazards. The slides provide information on the various aspects of planning and producing a music magazine called VOLUME, including gathering feedback, surveying target audiences, developing budgets, scheduling photo shoots and post-production, addressing legal requirements, and identifying potential hazards. The document demonstrates Tom's thorough planning process for his proposed print magazine.
VIBE was originally launched in 1993 as a global monthly music magazine aimed at teenagers. It shut down in 2009 due to high costs but relaunched as a website. In 2012, it returned as a print magazine sold in major cities. SpinMedia became the publisher in 2013, merging VIBE with other music brands. VIBE targets teenagers and older with genres like hip hop, R&B, and pop. It maintains a "house style" with changing colors and the logo on every page.
The document is a pitch for a new music magazine called "Volume" that would focus on hip hop, pop, and R&B genres. It describes developing two initial ideas before deciding on Volume. Details about choosing inspiration from VIBE magazine and the name "Volume" are provided. The target audience is identified as 13-25 years old and below the line marketing through social media like Twitter and Facebook is planned. A sample magazine flat plan and details about the first issue like a bright colorful cover featuring an artist interview are shared. Pricing for the magazine at £2 is explained based on a cost analysis.
The document provides an analysis of the media conventions used, challenged, and developed in the creation of the author's music magazine. It summarizes the key influences and design choices, including taking inspiration from the layout, fonts, and cover conventions of magazines like Loud and Quiet and Q while also making adaptations suited to their intended audience of late teenagers to middle-aged adults. Examples of challenged conventions included using fewer images and a non-strict color scheme to achieve a simpler, more modern style. The author analyzes how their magazine represents young to middle-aged adults through its indie music genre focus, formal fonts and colors, and minimalistic photography and clothing styles featured.
The document provides guidelines for designing the front cover of a music magazine, comparing the conventions used in other magazines. It notes that most conventions are followed, such as using text layering, excluding text in front of the model, and using cover lines to show contents. However, it breaks from having the model look at the reader, instead showing them working, to fit the magazine's focus on music for film and TV. Sticking closely to conventions helps potential readers recognize it as a music magazine, but some breaks from convention can be justified to better represent the magazine's topic.
The document discusses the conventions used in magazine design that the author's music magazine follows, such as including a model on the cover looking at the reader, using text layers for depth, and promoting offers; it also explains some conventions the magazine breaks like having the model working instead of looking at the reader. The author believes following most conventions helps the magazine be recognizable while small breaks in convention add uniqueness.
The document provides details about the design of a magazine cover and contents page. It discusses design elements like the masthead, fonts, images, and colors used on the cover. It notes the target audience is 17+ year olds and the magazine aims to portray women in a positive, empowered light rather than focusing on their appearance or conforming to stereotypes. The contents page layout includes sections, a logo, issue date, pull quotes, and social media links following conventions but with a minimal design to focus on the message of empowering women in the music industry.
The document discusses how the media product, a music magazine, represents and conforms to conventions of real music magazines while also trying to be unique.
The summary discusses using conventions like mastheads, house styles, prices, and layouts similarly to magazines like NME and Kerrang. Photos and articles also conform to expectations but try to challenge stereotypes. Representation of various social groups is discussed through inclusion of male and female interviews and photos from music festivals. Overall, the magazine aims to be familiar yet independent for its target 16-21 year old audience.
The document is an evaluation of a student's media magazine product. It summarizes how the magazine uses conventions of real teen pop magazines in its format and design.
The student conducted research on existing teen pop magazines to inform the design of their magazine. Key conventions that were adopted include using bright colors, informal fonts, pull quotes, and prominent images of artists on the cover and contents page.
The evaluation also notes some ways the student challenged conventions, such as using fewer images on the contents page to reduce clutter, and including fewer fashion references on the cover to focus attention on the music.
Media Evaluation Question 3: What have you learnt from your audience feedback?charlotteseal123
The document describes a student's music magazine project. The student created the magazine independently, taking all photographs and editing them for inclusion. The target audience was females aged 15+ and the magazine focused on chart music. Inspiration was drawn from Q Magazine for its similar genre and conventions like prominent cover photos. The contents page included competitions, photos and an editor's letter to engage readers. A feature article on a band splitting up used bright photos, subheadings and questions to grab attention. The student learned new skills in photography, editing and desktop publishing software to create the magazine.
This magazine cover features Cheryl Cole as the main image. The large main cover line "Cheryl Cole rocks" engages readers about what may be said about her in the magazine. Additional cover lines in red and white text advertise other music artists and stories featured inside. The masthead at the top identifies this as issue of "Q" magazine.
The document discusses the design and layout of a student magazine called "REVERSE". It aims to attract a young male and female audience interested in indie/punk music. The front cover features a photo of a band called "Wolves" to draw attention. The contents page stands out with diagonally arranged images and rotated text. Feedback from test surveys was positive, showing the magazine successfully conveyed the intended casual, eye-catching style while providing enough information.
This document summarizes and evaluates the front cover and double page spread of a student-created magazine focused on pop music. On the front cover, the student uses bright pink and blue colors in the masthead and cover lines to match the pop genre. Images of musicians and cover lines about celebrities are used to appeal to the target teenage female audience. Bold anchorage text introduces the main artists. On the double page spread, black and white images of the artists scrolling along the top provide contrast. A pink masthead and quote box in the center engage readers in the interview content. Overall, the document analyzes design choices and how they appeal to and attract the intended readership.
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.
The document summarizes how the author's magazine product represents and conforms to conventions of real music magazines while also trying to challenge some conventions. The summary uses conventions like mastheads, covers, layouts, and content from magazines like NME and Kerrang as references. It also discusses representing various social groups like gender and ages to appeal to different audiences. Overall, the author aims to create a magazine that feels unique but is still recognizable to their target audience of 16-21 year olds interested in indie music.
This document is Harry Frampton's log book, evaluation, and preliminary tasks for his music magazine production project. Some key points:
- Harry chose design elements like the green gradient and band font to create brand recognition for the band featured on the cover.
- Conventions from established magazines like NME, DIY, and Q were replicated, such as the short masthead "inD" and contents page layout, to attract readers familiar with those publications.
- Cover lines, images, and articles featured both well-known and smaller indie bands to appeal to fans across experience levels.
- Social media integration and a ticket giveaway were included to draw in younger readers.
- Layout
The document summarizes the process of evaluating existing magazines to help design a new music magazine. Key points analyzed include covers, color schemes, fonts, photo editing, conventions, target audiences, and potential distributors. Existing magazines provided inspiration on techniques like limited color palettes, prominent mastheads, and featuring artists to represent the genre. The goal was to create an eye-catching cover that established the magazine while appealing to both male and female readers across various music interests and ages.
The document discusses forms and conventions in media products. It then summarizes the key forms and conventions used in the student's magazine cover and contents page design.
For the cover, conventions like masthead placement, selling lines, date/price/issue info, barcodes, additional images and cover lines are followed. The largest central photo, headline styles, and pull quotes are also conventional.
For the contents page, conventions like masthead/logo, page numbers, subheadings, brief descriptions, column structure, and use of a large central photo are followed. Graphics and a range of smaller photos are also used conventionally. The design draws inspiration from other magazines' styles.
Rhia De Carlo, a singer who won Britain's Got Talent with her band, has received a contract to become a solo artist in Los Angeles that could make her millions, but it would require leaving her bandmates. She has until December 27th to decide whether to take the contract or remain with her band, risking a decline in fame and earnings. Rhia's website has set up a poll for fans to vote on whether she should stay with her band or leave for her solo opportunity.
This document contains details of planning and pitching two print-based music magazines called VOLUME and Prime of Sound. It includes mood boards, proposals, and details on the magazines' target audiences, genres, colors, names, and marketing strategies. For VOLUME, the target audience is teenagers and young adults aged 13+, the main color is orange, and the genre is R&B, pop, and hip hop. For Prime of Sound, the target audience is 12+ and the magazine will compete with Q Magazine by repeating some of its successful aspects.
This document discusses preparations for a pitch, including ensuring the room, computer, projector, remote, and screen are all working properly in advance. The presenter wants to leave time to set everything up and practice with the remote to avoid technical difficulties during the actual pitch.
The document provides details of Tom Evenden's planning and pitching of a print-based media product. It includes slides covering feedback, survey results, budget plans, production schedules, legal issues, intellectual property, photography plans, and hazards. The slides provide information on the various aspects of planning and producing a music magazine called VOLUME, including gathering feedback, surveying target audiences, developing budgets, scheduling photo shoots and post-production, addressing legal requirements, and identifying potential hazards. The document demonstrates Tom's thorough planning process for his proposed print magazine.
VIBE was originally launched in 1993 as a global monthly music magazine aimed at teenagers. It shut down in 2009 due to high costs but relaunched as a website. In 2012, it returned as a print magazine sold in major cities. SpinMedia became the publisher in 2013, merging VIBE with other music brands. VIBE targets teenagers and older with genres like hip hop, R&B, and pop. It maintains a "house style" with changing colors and the logo on every page.
The document is a pitch for a new music magazine called "Volume" that would focus on hip hop, pop, and R&B genres. It describes developing two initial ideas before deciding on Volume. Details about choosing inspiration from VIBE magazine and the name "Volume" are provided. The target audience is identified as 13-25 years old and below the line marketing through social media like Twitter and Facebook is planned. A sample magazine flat plan and details about the first issue like a bright colorful cover featuring an artist interview are shared. Pricing for the magazine at £2 is explained based on a cost analysis.
SpinMedia are the global publishers of VIBE magazine. They became the publishers in 2013 when VIBE returned as a magazine. SpinMedia was founded in 1999 and also publishes other music magazines. It oversees all aspects of running VIBE and its related websites. The document provides details on SpinMedia's ownership and leadership structure, the purpose and history of VIBE magazine, its target audience, competitors, and production and distribution processes. It also covers legal, ethical and regulatory considerations for VIBE.
EP Magazine is a proposed new music magazine targeting 15-30 year olds interested in alternative and rock genres. The pitch outlines plans for the magazine's content, design, promotion, budget, and production timeline. Key details include:
- The magazine will be called EP and focus on informing readers about recent music events through reviews, interviews, and festival/award coverage.
- Promotion will primarily use social media below-the-line advertising due to the young target audience. The first issue is planned for May release.
- An annual budget of over £200,000 is required to cover office space, equipment, salaries, marketing, printing costs, and distribution. Revenue will come from subscriptions and advertising.
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Sophie Lyne is proposing a new rock/indie and alternative music magazine called "Record". The 32-page monthly magazine would have a black and white design with some elements in red. It would feature articles on bands and artists, album and concert reviews, and photos. The target audience is 15-35 year olds, mainly male, from socio-economic classes C1, C2, and E, with a diverse ethnicity. The magazine would retail for £3.99 and compete with publications like Q, NME, and XXL magazine.
The document provides information about Q magazine, including its publisher, target audience, content, and analysis of design elements. Bauer Media Group publishes Q magazine, a monthly music magazine in the UK with a circulation of 48,353. It focuses on rock and roll music and includes interviews, reviews, and advertisements. Q magazine aims its content at readers interested in current developments in the music industry. It maintains a consistent brand identity across its magazine and website through consistent use of typography, color schemes, and layout.
Sophie Lyne proposes a new rock/alternative music magazine called EP. It will be an A4 sized, monthly publication sold for £2.99. EP will feature interviews, album reviews, and concert listings covering well-known bands in the rock genre. The target audience is 15-30 year olds, mainly male, from socioeconomic classes ABC1 to C2E. Sophie plans to design the front cover and double page spread in Adobe Photoshop CS5 to showcase her magazine concept when pitching it.
This document appears to be a magazine or newspaper layout containing various articles, advertisements, reviews, and other sections. It includes headlines, images, stand verses, an editor's note, contact details, and information for next week's issue and ongoing advertisements or competitions. The layout contains multiple articles, reviews, advertisements, and continues articles across pages. It likely contains local news, events, and other content of interest to the publication's readers.
This document provides a mind map for planning and pitching a print based media product. The mind map focuses on generating initial ideas through brainstorming potential topics, formats, sections, features and target audiences that could form the basis of a print publication pitch. Key factors such as costs, resources, competitors and timelines are mapped out to help structure the pitch.
Unit 13 – planning and pitching a print based media product checklistNick Crafts
This document provides a checklist for planning and pitching a print-based media product such as a music magazine. It outlines tasks for researching the product genre, target audience, and production processes. It includes developing a proposal with details on the magazine format, style, and content. The proposal should be presented to a client or focus group, and feedback should be gathered and considered to refine the plans for the magazine before production.
This document outlines a photo shoot plan for a music magazine focusing on rock and alternative genres. It discusses using long and mid shots of artists to clearly show who they are while giving an authoritative look. For the cover, high key lighting will be used to ensure visibility, while low key lighting on interior spreads can reflect the darker nature of rock. Post-production in Photoshop will integrate text and imagery to give a professional layout, reflecting the genres. Models should have an edgy look to represent rock and alternative without being too glamorous or grunge. Casual clothing like jeans and jackets will reflect the lack of formality in rock. Hair should look messy with volume, and makeup will be darker for females
Unit 13 planning and pitching a print based media productNick Crafts
This document provides guidance for a unit on planning and pitching a print-based media product. It outlines the learning outcomes, assessment criteria, content to be taught, and delivery guidance. The key goals of the unit are for learners to understand existing print products, generate ideas for an original product, develop proposals and sample materials for two ideas, pitch the ideas to gain feedback, and use the feedback to inform a production plan. Learners will analyze existing products, generate appropriate ideas, create proposals and samples, deliver an effective pitch, and produce a detailed production plan informed by feedback.
This production plan outlines the timeline for creating a print magazine over 3 weeks. It includes scheduling interviews, writing articles, photo shoots, layout design, proofreading, printing, and distribution. Key dates include deciding on content by April 16th, completing articles and photos by April 22nd and 28th, proofreading by April 29th, sending to print by April 30th, and distribution by May 4th. The plan schedules out tasks for editors, journalists, writers, photographers, and production staff to collaborate in launching the new magazine issue.
A mood board is a visual representation that helps convey the overall concept, tone and style of a proposed print media product. It typically includes images, colors, textures and fonts that inspire the aesthetic and feel intended for the final product. Creating a mood board allows one to effectively plan and pitch new print media ideas by demonstrating their vision through a collage of visual elements that evoke the desired emotional response or experience for potential readers/viewers.
The document outlines a proposal for a print-based music magazine focused on a specific subgenre. It includes details about the magazine's:
1) Working title and genre it will cover.
2) Content such as photos, articles, and reviews of smaller, non-mainstream bands.
3) Style and presentation with descriptions of font, color scheme, and how pages will be constructed using specific software tools.
4) Intended audience of mostly 14-25 year old male and female fans interested in the genre's music and culture.
5) Key details like being 16 pages long, A4 size, and a monthly release schedule.
This document provides instructions for a student to complete an assignment planning and pitching a print-based media product. Specifically, the student must:
1) Create a contents page listing the tasks carried out and their learning outcomes.
2) Provide a summary of the proposed music magazine's genre, whether it contains fiction/non-fiction, and its circulation frequency.
3) Analyze the codes and conventions used in the magazine's front cover and double-page spread, considering their semiotic meanings and connotations.
4) Investigate how the magazine is constructed in pre-production, production, and post-production, gathering evidence from industry contacts.
This document provides details on the design, house style, target audience, and publishing plans for a proposed vinyl and R&B music magazine. The magazine will target 16-39 year old females and feature photos taken by the author alongside music news and gossip. It will have a sophisticated but subtle design with a left-aligned masthead and use of pastel colors and fonts like Cambria and Ariel to appear high-end. The monthly magazine plans to cost £2.99 per issue and be published by Time Inc., a company experienced in women's magazines that also enables digital and multimedia platforms.
This document provides details on the proposed magazine "Replay" including:
- The magazine will focus on chart music to appeal to a younger audience.
- It will be published monthly to satisfy reader preferences and control costs.
- Name ideas like "Replay" emphasize replaying music.
- The target audience is 17-28 year olds who listen to chart music while driving.
- Photo shoots will include contrasting outfits and a studio setting to look professional.
- Sample covers and layouts emphasize simplicity and focus on images and headlines.
- Prices will be £2.20-4.20 for issues and £7 monthly for online subscriptions.
The document outlines the planning process for a student magazine project called VOLUME, including proposals for content, design elements like colors and fonts, budget plans, distribution strategies, and photography plans for shoots to gather content and images. Key aspects of planning included setting budgets, securing locations, and obtaining necessary permissions.
The document provides details for developing two music magazine concepts - AMP and Endure. Key details include:
- AMP will have a loud, outgoing brand image using blue and red colors to represent amplification. It will target 15-35 year olds and feature up and coming artists.
- Endure will have a professional, enduring brand image using black, grey, and yellow colors. It will also target 15-35 year olds and focus on consistency and longevity.
- Both magazines will be monthly, include articles, photos, reviews and more to engage their target audiences. Color schemes and elements like the masthead location and page numbers will be repeated for consistency.
Karis Hays proposes a music magazine called Replay aimed at ages 18-30 that focuses on chart music. By focusing on popular music from radio stations like Radio 1 and Capital FM, the magazine will appeal to a wide audience across genres, genders, and ethnicities. The magazine will be published monthly to satisfy reader preferences and allow funds to improve quality over frequent issues. It will feature a neutral color scheme and styles, including natural photographs, to maintain an inclusive feel.
The document provides details for planning a magazine called Dreamer. It discusses choosing the name Dreamer to represent the magazine's indie genre focus on vision and ideals. It describes setting the magazine's genre as indie, price as £2.85, and monthly publication frequency. The target reader is identified as females aged 13-16 who enjoy socializing, music, and shopping. The mission statement outlines a minimalist, modern approach focusing on up-and-coming artists across genres for teenagers and young adults. Font choices and a color scheme are selected to achieve a clean, stylish look. A draft front cover and contents page layout are presented.
The document provides details about the planning and development of a magazine called Dreamer. It discusses the name, genre, price, and frequency of the magazine. It also provides a reader profile, mission statement, font selections for headlines and body text, color scheme ideas, and page layout plans for the front cover and contents page. The magazine will focus on indie music, have a monthly release schedule, and target teenage girls as its primary readership.
The document provides instructions for a media coursework assignment to design the front page layout of a new school/college magazine. Students must produce the front page layout featuring a student photograph using desktop publishing and image editing software. They must also produce a mock-up of the contents page layout. Students will be assessed on research and planning, production, and evaluation.
The document provides instructions for a media coursework assignment to design the front page layout of a new school/college magazine. Students must produce the front page layout featuring a student photograph and text using desktop publishing and image editing software. They must also produce a mock-up of the contents page layout. Students will be assessed on research and planning, production, and evaluation.
The document is a reflection on how the student's magazine cover adheres to and challenges conventions of real music magazines like NME. The student followed conventions like placement of titles, quotes, and band listings. However, they broke some conventions like not including the magazine name on the contents page or a band index. The student learned photography and editing skills using Photoshop to enhance their magazine's professional look.
The document provides details about the planning and development of a magazine called Dreamer. It discusses the name, genre, price, and frequency of the magazine. The target reader is described as female aged 13-16 who enjoys music, social media, and shopping. A mission statement says the magazine will focus on up-and-coming indie and acoustic artists in a simple, modern style to appeal to multiple ages and genders. Several fonts and color schemes are proposed for the magazine's design. Draft page layouts are presented for the front cover and contents page.
The document provides production details for a coursework assignment to design the front page, contents page, and a double-page spread for a new music magazine. It outlines the tasks, which are to design the front cover featuring an image and text, a contents page layout, and a double-page article spread. It also lists the assessment criteria of research and planning, production, and evaluation. Additional pages provide definitions of magazine design elements and conventions, as well as research results from an audience survey to help inform the design of the magazine.
This document contains evidence submitted by a student named Lewis Millard for a media production qualification. It includes rough sketches, final sketches, and draft layouts for a print-based music magazine called AMP. The sketches show planned sections like the cover stories, masthead, and main image. The draft layouts demonstrate the planned placement of these sections on the front cover and double-page spreads. The document also includes discussions of inspiration magazines, font styles, and a draft interview article.
The document provides details about the production of a print-based media product for a music magazine called AMP. It includes rough sketches, final sketches, and layouts for the front cover and double page spreads. It also includes plans for photography, interviews, distribution, and a four-week production schedule. The production schedule outlines tasks for each week such as finding artists, conducting interviews, designing layouts, and distributing the finished magazine.
The document outlines plans for a new indie music magazine. It discusses taking inspiration from existing magazines like NME, Q and Kerrang in terms of style and layout. The proposed magazine will focus on up-and-coming music events and interviews with indie artists. The target audience is seen as teenagers who want to keep up with new artists. A monthly issue format is proposed, along with subscription options and an online presence to engage readers. Front covers and article layouts incorporating photos are discussed to attract buyers.
Q1 in what ways does your media product use8060media
This document discusses the conventions used in the creator's music magazine cover and how it compares to real magazines. The creator researched conventions of music magazine covers, including layout, images, fonts and language. Key conventions on the front cover include the masthead, cover lines, barcode/price, main image, footer, and pull quote. The creator's cover includes these elements, such as the masthead "Vivid" in colorful fonts, the large main image, and a pull quote in orange font. The cover is designed to look like other electro-dance music magazines in terms of style and content while also including competitions and extras to attract readers. Overall, the creator developed their cover using researched conventions but also added unique elements
Q1 in what ways does your media product use8060media
This document discusses the conventions used in the creator's music magazine cover compared to existing magazines. It examines elements like the masthead, images, headlines, quotes and other typical cover components. For the creator's cover, called "Vivid", most conventions are followed such as placing the masthead in the left third and including a main image, headlines and flashes. However, some elements are made more prominent like the artist's name in red and the pull quote in orange. The goal was to create a cover that fits genre expectations while also standing out from other electro-dance magazines and enticing readers to learn more about the featured artist.
This document outlines plans for a new music magazine called "Lyrical" focused on pop and rock music. It discusses the target audience as 16-30 year olds from socio-economic classes B-C2 of both genders. It proposes a monthly circulation to allow time to source stories and images. The color scheme, masthead font, and social media strategy are described. Sample pages from an issue include contents, editor's note, interviews, reviews, advertisements and competitions. Inspiration is drawn from Billboard magazine in terms of layout and design elements.
This document outlines plans for a new music magazine called "Lyrical" focused on pop and rock music. It discusses the target audience as 16-30 year olds from socio-economic classes B-C2 of both genders. It proposes a monthly circulation to allow time to source stories and images. The color scheme, masthead font, and social media strategy are described. Sample pages from an issue include contents, editor's note, interviews, reviews, advertisements and competitions. Inspiration is drawn from Billboard magazine in terms of layout and design elements.
The document provides an analysis and evaluation by Samantha Pople of various magazine covers in order to inform the design of her own music magazine cover. She looks at color schemes, layouts, fonts, and main images on existing covers from magazines like Q, Rolling Stone, and NME. Samantha decides on a 2-4 color scheme with contrasting colors and either bold or pastel hues. She also experiments with editing photos and choosing appropriate fonts and images for her own cover.
A Visual Guide to 1 Samuel | A Tale of Two HeartsSteve Thomason
These slides walk through the story of 1 Samuel. Samuel is the last judge of Israel. The people reject God and want a king. Saul is anointed as the first king, but he is not a good king. David, the shepherd boy is anointed and Saul is envious of him. David shows honor while Saul continues to self destruct.
How to Setup Warehouse & Location in Odoo 17 InventoryCeline George
In this slide, we'll explore how to set up warehouses and locations in Odoo 17 Inventory. This will help us manage our stock effectively, track inventory levels, and streamline warehouse operations.
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering.pptxDenish Jangid
Chapter wise All Notes of First year Basic Civil Engineering
Syllabus
Chapter-1
Introduction to objective, scope and outcome the subject
Chapter 2
Introduction: Scope and Specialization of Civil Engineering, Role of civil Engineer in Society, Impact of infrastructural development on economy of country.
Chapter 3
Surveying: Object Principles & Types of Surveying; Site Plans, Plans & Maps; Scales & Unit of different Measurements.
Linear Measurements: Instruments used. Linear Measurement by Tape, Ranging out Survey Lines and overcoming Obstructions; Measurements on sloping ground; Tape corrections, conventional symbols. Angular Measurements: Instruments used; Introduction to Compass Surveying, Bearings and Longitude & Latitude of a Line, Introduction to total station.
Levelling: Instrument used Object of levelling, Methods of levelling in brief, and Contour maps.
Chapter 4
Buildings: Selection of site for Buildings, Layout of Building Plan, Types of buildings, Plinth area, carpet area, floor space index, Introduction to building byelaws, concept of sun light & ventilation. Components of Buildings & their functions, Basic concept of R.C.C., Introduction to types of foundation
Chapter 5
Transportation: Introduction to Transportation Engineering; Traffic and Road Safety: Types and Characteristics of Various Modes of Transportation; Various Road Traffic Signs, Causes of Accidents and Road Safety Measures.
Chapter 6
Environmental Engineering: Environmental Pollution, Environmental Acts and Regulations, Functional Concepts of Ecology, Basics of Species, Biodiversity, Ecosystem, Hydrological Cycle; Chemical Cycles: Carbon, Nitrogen & Phosphorus; Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Water Pollution: Water Quality standards, Introduction to Treatment & Disposal of Waste Water. Reuse and Saving of Water, Rain Water Harvesting. Solid Waste Management: Classification of Solid Waste, Collection, Transportation and Disposal of Solid. Recycling of Solid Waste: Energy Recovery, Sanitary Landfill, On-Site Sanitation. Air & Noise Pollution: Primary and Secondary air pollutants, Harmful effects of Air Pollution, Control of Air Pollution. . Noise Pollution Harmful Effects of noise pollution, control of noise pollution, Global warming & Climate Change, Ozone depletion, Greenhouse effect
Text Books:
1. Palancharmy, Basic Civil Engineering, McGraw Hill publishers.
2. Satheesh Gopi, Basic Civil Engineering, Pearson Publishers.
3. Ketki Rangwala Dalal, Essentials of Civil Engineering, Charotar Publishing House.
4. BCP, Surveying volume 1
Andreas Schleicher presents PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Thinking - 18 Jun...EduSkills OECD
Andreas Schleicher, Director of Education and Skills at the OECD presents at the launch of PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Minds, Creative Schools on 18 June 2024.
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
إضغ بين إيديكم من أقوى الملازم التي صممتها
ملزمة تشريح الجهاز الهيكلي (نظري 3)
💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
تتميز هذهِ الملزمة بعِدة مُميزات :
1- مُترجمة ترجمة تُناسب جميع المستويات
2- تحتوي على 78 رسم توضيحي لكل كلمة موجودة بالملزمة (لكل كلمة !!!!)
#فهم_ماكو_درخ
3- دقة الكتابة والصور عالية جداً جداً جداً
4- هُنالك بعض المعلومات تم توضيحها بشكل تفصيلي جداً (تُعتبر لدى الطالب أو الطالبة بإنها معلومات مُبهمة ومع ذلك تم توضيح هذهِ المعلومات المُبهمة بشكل تفصيلي جداً
5- الملزمة تشرح نفسها ب نفسها بس تكلك تعال اقراني
6- تحتوي الملزمة في اول سلايد على خارطة تتضمن جميع تفرُعات معلومات الجهاز الهيكلي المذكورة في هذهِ الملزمة
واخيراً هذهِ الملزمة حلالٌ عليكم وإتمنى منكم إن تدعولي بالخير والصحة والعافية فقط
كل التوفيق زملائي وزميلاتي ، زميلكم محمد الذهبي 💊💊
🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...
Pitch for Prime of Sound
1.
2. ‘Prime of Sound’ is a magazine aimed for teenagers and young adults.
The main aim of the magazine is to keep fans updated about what
is new within Rock and Pop music and bands.
I chose these genre for my magazine because I found that Rock and
Pop are the most popular genres of magazines through
SurveyMonkey, this means that the magazine will cover the two
most popular genre and manage to release details of spectators
favourite type of music and can make the magazine much more
popular.
I will be releasing my magazine monthly, this is because it will allow
the publishers of the magazine too put in a much larger range of
information within the magazine – as apposed to trying to fill a
weekly edition. This will also give more time for the magazine to be
written and published better without rushing too much for the
deadline. The price of my magazine will be £1.99 per magazine.
3. I chose these genre for my magazine because I
found that Rock and Pop are the most popular
genres of magazines through SurveyMonkey,
this means that the magazine will cover the two
most popular genre and manage to release
details of spectators favourite type of music and
can make the magazine much more popular.
4. Pump it up
I thought of this
magazine name because
of the saying ‘Pump up
the Volume’. I thought
this would emphasize to
the viewers that this
magazine is more to
teenagers
Different Names for the
Magazine
Sound beat
Sound beat could be used as
a title because it is relevant
tot the type of magazine I am
creating. It would appeal to
the target audience because
it is relevant to the genre of
the magazine to make it
easier to notice what the
magazine is about just by the
front cover masthead
Rhythm
I thought of this title for the
magazine because this magazine
features R&B music, along with
pop. This would appeal to the
target audience because the
name is relative to the genre of
the magazine so the audience
know what the magazine is
about, not basing it on the front
pictures all the time.
Volume
I chose Volume as my title of
my magazine because it is
relevant to the genre, it is
easy to remember for the
target audience, it can stand
out and it can be easy to use a
slogan (e.g. Pump up the
VOLUME!)
V
I thought of this magazine name
related to the magazine ‘Q’, I chose
‘V’ because ‘V’ could stand for
volume. This would illustrate to the
target audience this magazine is
mainly for teenagers but still for
young adults
Prime of Sound
I thought of this title for
the magazine because it
makes the magazine sound
important and powerful.
This would make the
viewer think this magazine
is the true nature of the
music they are passionate
about and the chief of the
music magazine
Sound Wave
I thought of Sound Wave because
it clearly connotes in its title what
it is about. This would appeal to
the target audience because it is a
simple title of which can easily be
remembered and probably stand
out as a magazine masthead
Super-Sound
I thought of Super-Sound
because it connotes to the
target audience what this
magazine is based on. This
would appeal to the target
audience because its
simple and to the point
5. Different Colours for the
Magazine
Red – (Prime of Sound)
I like the colour red for
the magazine because
again it is eye-catching
to help get new
viewers or to make it
easy for the viewers to
find it more easier.
Blue
I thought of the colour
blue for my main colour
because it relates to
teenagers more than
adults but it can relate to
boys more than girls
Green
Green may be a good colour
for my magazine because it
is different to many colours
other magazines have.
However it may not be eye-
catching for viewers
Orange
I like the colour orange for my magazine colour because it is
different to many magazines, because they choose eye-
catching colours or black and white –this also makes it easy
for the viewer to easily spot the magazine as they shall know
Purple
Purple may be a good
colour because its bright
and catches the eye of the
viewer but, it may show it
could appeal more to girls
than boys
Yellow
I like the colour
yellow because it
can easily catches
the eye of the
viewer. I also like
this colour because
it appeals to
teenagers and
young adult (my
target audience)
6. For my magazine I looked
on DaFont.com to see
which font I could use for
my magazine masthead. In
the end I narrowed it
down to these final six
font (left). I used
Photoshop to colour
them, and in the end, I
used the ‘Full House’ font
(circled).
7.
8. In the end I have chosen to have ‘Prime of Sound’
as my magazine name. This is because it makes the
magazine sound important and powerful. The word
“Prime” connotes something major and key
therefore highlighting the importance of the
magazine.
This would make the viewer think this magazine is
the true nature of the music they are passionate
about and the chief of the music magazine.
9. Here is my magazine flat plan. Within
it, it connotes what will be included in
the magazine. Throughout the
magazine I have tried to make sure
the magazine can keep to the subject
of music. It involves articles, Top of
the Charts, Upcoming Gigs and much
more. What I find important within
the flat plan is on page 1, it will have
the picture of next months magazine,
this will illustrate to the reader what
to look for in the shops for the next
issue of ‘Prime of Sound’.
10. I have chosen to have the
measurements of my
magazine as 28.5 cm high
and 21 cm wide. This is
the same as Q Magazine
as well, but I feel that this
was the right size to have
for my magazine because
it is not oversized, and not
too small as a monthly
magazine.
28.5cm
21 cm
11. My magazine will be distributed as a hard copy.
I will be selling my magazine in different types of
stores such as WHSmith, TESCO, Sainsbury's etc.
12. I have chosen to compete with Q Magazine,
which was my magazine of inspiration. This is
because I feel that my magazine will manage to
fill in all the faults that Q Magazine has in order
to make my magazine better – seeming as Q
Magazine is the number 1 sold magazine of the
year.
13. I used a website to help
calculate how much it
would cost for ‘Prime of
Sound’ magazine to be
printed. It came out as
£8710, so if I charge the
customers £1.50 for the
magazine, I can make the
money back and also
make a profit.
14. Computer x10 Dell Desktop PC Computer Set - 17" Flat LCD Monitor - Optiplex Series Desktop - 1GB - 80GB - Wireless
Internet Ready WIFI - Keyboard - Mouse - Power cord - Windows XP Pro SP3 Pre-installed
£55.49 x 10 = £554.90
Camera x5 Nikon Coolpix L330 Compact Digital Camera - Black (20.2MP, 26x Optical Zoom) 3.0 inch LCD
£92.89 x 5 = £464.45
Printer x3 Epson Expression Home XP-322 All-in-One Printer with WiFi/Epson Connect (Print/Scan/Copy)
£49.00 x 3 = £147.00
Tripod x3 Hama Star 61 Tripod
£14.00 x 3 = £42.00
Photoshop x10 for 3 months £38.73
Desk x10 Home office Desk with 4 drawers 1 Shelf - Color: Beech Effect
£64.99 x 10 = £649.90
Desk Seats x10 Outdoortips Adjustable Fabric Mesh Seat Backrest Executive Office Computer Desk Chair
£35.99 x 10 = £359.90
Paper 5 Star Premier A4 Copier Paper Smooth Ream-Wrapped 80gsm High White - 5 x 500 Sheets
£14.49
Printer Ink 20 inks, Compatible Printer Inks Cartridges
£8.99
Pens Staedtler Stick 430 F-9CP5 Ballpoint Pen Fine Ballpoint Pen Fine - Black (Pack of 50)
£9.33
Property office space for 3
months
CO-WORK CANNON STREET
£749
Water machine BRITA XXL Optimax Cool Water Filter, 8.5 L – White
£26.18
15. Printing Cost: £8,710 for 60 pages
Overall cost of Office supplies: £3,064.87
£8,710 + £3,064.87 = £11,774.87
Selling Magazine for: £1.50
I will produce 5,000 copies of the magazine
5,000 x 1.50 = 7,500
Photography Studio Rent Cost
Cost: £115 – Half a day
7,500 – 115 = £7,385
11,774.87 - 7,385 = £4,389.87
£6 per hour salary – 20 hours a week = £120 per week
X4 workers = £480 lost
£4,389.87 – £480 = £3,909.87
Marketing Cost = Below the market advertisement = free
Advertisement income = £50 per advertisement of the month = x4 companies
200 + 3,909.87 = 4,109.87
If I manage to make approximately £4,109.87
16. Here is my production
plan for ‘Prime of
Sound’. All workers must
follow exactly what is on
this plan in order to get
the magazine up and
ready for the release
date
17. Before taking my pictures, I needed a good idea of what I needed for
the two pictures I will be taking for the Front Cover and the Double
page spread and whether I will use props within my pictures.
At first I had the idea of having the model looking sad for the front
cover, because within the article, it was about the artist going through
a tough time in their career so I thought having the model look sad, it
would become more eye-catching for the spectators to find out why
the artist is so upset.
In the end I decided that I will have two pictures of the artist
modelling. This is because it allows the spectator to see their artist
looking their best for the magazine which can connote how my
magazine is a professional magazine. I took both pictures in the
corridor because it has a plain background. I also included no props for
the picture, this is because then I can get 100% focus on the artist only
and is cheaper to fund.
18.
19. Here is the pictures that I took for the
front cover and DPS of my magazine. For
this I wanted a close up for both images.
This is because it makes the artist look as
the main idea without distracting the
readers from what the main attraction is.
I feel that this also helps the magazine to
look more professional because of what
the magazine will include.
20. My hand drawn draft is going
to be helpful whilst making my
magazine front cover (and
magazine itself) because it
clearly illustrates where
certain parts of the magazine
should be and final ideas on
how the front page will be laid
out, also the hand drawn draft
gives out certain features (for
example colour) which I can
use to add to the magazine
itself which can make it seem
more better to the target
audience.
21. Masthead
Other artists that
have been
interviewed for this
issue of the
magazine
New issue
Name of
the main
artist
Main Headline
Coverline/Artist’s
quote in interview
Logos of the
social sites this
magazine is
connected to
Barcode
Magazine Promotion
Price
22. Information Bar
Website URL
Page Number
Page Number
Main Article
Picture of the artist
Photographer & Editor
Artist Name
Logo of Magazine
23. Main Headline
The connotations of having the first
word of the main headline of the
artist helps the reader to know who
the artist is. The denotation of
having the name in the same colour
as the magazine logo colour
emphasizes she is important in this
copy of the magazine and the main
focus of the issue
Main Image
Having the main image of the artist
fill up two thirds of the front cover
helps emphasize that they are the
main story of the issue of the
magazine.
Cover Lines
Having the cover lines in red
and black denotes how this
part of the magazine, but is not
the main subject of the
interview for the main artist.
The connotations of having in
black and red emphasizes this,
as otherwise it would be in
white to match the main
headline.
Background
The denotation of having the
background plain white
emphasizes more to the Artist
to make them main focus of
the magazine so the viewers
will not be distracted by a
fancy background. This also
manages to keep the magazine
original and neat.
Flasher
The denotation of using ‘1st Issue’
across the side of page helps to
illustrate the success of the
magazine, also having it in gold
illustrates the golden moment for
‘Prime of Sound’ an emphasises
the celebration.
24. House Style
For the house style, I have tried to
keep the contents page as original as
I can compared to the front cover. By
doing this, it illustrates consistency
for any spectators which emphasizes
my magazines professionalism.
Having the numbers in red keeps the
page eye-catching and easier for
viewers to find the page they are
looking for.
Headings
All of the headings in the contents page
are in bold. This connotes importance of
the two titles and makes the headings
more eye-catching for viewers.
Layout
The contents page is layout neatly.
The writing manages to fill two thirds
of the page with relevant
information – colourfully and boldly.
The main picture fills out the last
part of the page, this helps to
connote the main focus the issue of
the magazine has covered to keep
the audience informed that there is
still some more information to come.
Main Image
The main image of my magazine’s contents
page is of the main band featured in the
magazine. This is used to connote how the
band is still the main subject of the issues
magazine, and yet there are still for
information on other subjects in the
magazine with smaller images in the
bottom right.
25. Main Image
On the left, the
picture of the
main artist fills
out the entire
page. This
illustrates how
they are the
main attraction
of the issue of
the magazine.
Masthead
This double page
spread does not
have an official
Masthead apart
from using the
artist’s name in
the top right hand
corner. Within
the masthead, the
name is all in
caps, this is
because the it
manages to stand
out the name
better.
Layout
The layout is conveyed with having the artist on the left and the article on the right. Having
the picture of the artist on the left, filling the entire page, illustrates how they are the main
focus of the magazine. Having the article on the right in three columns helps emphasize how
into detail Q magazine has gone for into this interview.
26. As my magazine’s target audience is for around
the age group of teenagers, I have decided to
start off my marketing as below the line
marketing. This means I will be using social
media in order to get the word across better
about my magazine – and the more popular my
magazine can get, the more I can start to think I
can put my magazine within above the line
marketing.
27. Here are the Facebook and Twitter sites
that I had created to advertise via the
internet as my below the line marketing
28. I have chosen Bauer Media Group to be the publishers for ‘Prime of Sound’.
This is because Bauer publish ‘Q’ meaning they have a good idea of how to
publish a rock and pop magazine. Bauer also has good experience of what
is needed to publish ‘Q’ as they have managed to make ‘Q’ the number 1
popular music magazine of the year.
29. Here is my front cover for Prime of Sound. I
feel that this Front Cover is that it is filled
up with information that this magazine
issue is including. It is bright, eye-catching
and relevant to the themes and colour. This
is important because it briefly connotes to
the spectator what this magazine does and
what the magazine is about with keeping
up the appearance. What I also like about
this magazine is the fact that I have
included the logos of Facebook, twitter and
Instagram. This will connote to the readers
that this magazine uses Social Media to
market the magazine, and they can get
involved more with the magazine and also
can get the target audience involved
30. Here is my Double Page Spread (DPS) for
‘Prime of Sound’. Within it is the main
article of the artist that Prime of Sound
had interviewed for. As a review, I felt
like this DPS was kept neat and tidy, this
will give the impression of
professionalism to the spectators. It also
keeps up to the colour and theme to the
magazine – this helps to keep the readers
in the mind that they are reading Prime
of Sound. This is important because it
makes the magazine different, and
therefore their own.
31. If all can go well and to plan within the first year, then my
magazine will make approximately £4,100
The individual people will pay a small amount of £18 in order to
get every issue of my magazine of the year/£1.50 per issue they
will buy