This part of the planning includes the mood board (colour scheme, mast head designs, flashes, camera shots, mode of address and images used). It also includes the flat plan of my magazine.
The document discusses plans for a music magazine targeted towards young women aged 15-21. It considers color schemes, fonts, images, and modes of address to appeal to the target audience. The preferred color scheme is bright purple, grey, and black. Favorite fonts are bold, trendy styles like "Coolvetica" and "Europe Underground Worn" to look fun and draw attention. Casual camera shots and some slang language in the mode of address would make the magazine feel less formal and appeal more to teenagers.
The document discusses font and color choices for a magazine cover. For fonts, the author wants to use three similar sans serif fonts for text, with a bolder font for the masthead to make it stand out. Sans serif fonts are chosen to seem more informal for the target audience of females aged 18-30. The chosen colors are purples and blues, as these were advised to suit the target audience better than other colors like pink. Blues represent qualities like trust and calmness, relating to the beach sunset cover image. Purples represent luxury, relevant to the magazine's luxury boutique shop contents. Darker blues and purples will mainly be used.
The magazine uses a layout with large images and minimal text to appeal to readers who prefer visuals over large blocks of text. Across its four pages, 12 images are used to engage visual learners. A consistent brand identity is created through the use of red and black colors and a sans serif font. Most images show male musicians in dark costumes, which aligns with the indie rock genre but could alienate female readers by lacking representation of women. Analyzing this magazine's design informed the student's own magazine creation process.
The document provides an analysis of the textual and visual elements of a magazine spread. It examines the main image, masthead, sell lines, and other design features. The main image is a close-up shot of an artist displaying frustration, with fire coming from his mouth to seem edgier. The masthead uses the magazine's recognizable colors. Sell lines promote interview content and artist names. Together the elements are designed to attract the target rock music audience.
The document discusses font and color choices for a rock music magazine. It notes that rock magazines typically use bold, dramatic fonts that stand out and reflect the confident nature of rock music. The author chooses black, red, and white as the color palette since they are associated with rock's dark, grungy lifestyle and have been used successfully in similar magazines. Using complementary colors will create a consistent house style that makes reading easy and enjoyable while clearly communicating the magazine's rock genre.
This document discusses the results of market research conducted to help design a new rock magazine. Key findings include:
- 87.5% of the target audience correctly identified the sample magazine as a rock magazine, showing the style conveyed the intended genre.
- Over half found the sample magazine's sell lines on the cover appealing, especially a question as a sell line.
- 37.5% found the sell lines uninteresting, so the new magazine should include more sell lines.
- Most would pay £2 for the magazine, so that is a good price point.
- The sample used mainly male images, so the new magazine needs a mix of male and female images to appear for both g
This document evaluates several fonts for their suitability in a pop magazine. It discusses the pros and cons of each font, and whether they would be appropriate for the genre and target audience. Some of the fonts are described as fun, funky, bold, and eye-catching, making them suitable for a pop magazine aimed at teenagers. However, other fonts may be too busy or not have enough character. The document considers whether each font would stand out while allowing the content to remain the focus.
The document analyzes the branding, design, and messaging techniques used in a Billboard magazine cover featuring Rihanna. It discusses how the serious portrait of Rihanna, her red hair and outfit, and mysterious pull quote establish a sophisticated yet engaging tone. The sans-serif typography, masthead, and use of colors create a modern aesthetic that appeals to Billboard's target demographic of teenagers and young adults across multiple music genres.
The document discusses plans for a music magazine targeted towards young women aged 15-21. It considers color schemes, fonts, images, and modes of address to appeal to the target audience. The preferred color scheme is bright purple, grey, and black. Favorite fonts are bold, trendy styles like "Coolvetica" and "Europe Underground Worn" to look fun and draw attention. Casual camera shots and some slang language in the mode of address would make the magazine feel less formal and appeal more to teenagers.
The document discusses font and color choices for a magazine cover. For fonts, the author wants to use three similar sans serif fonts for text, with a bolder font for the masthead to make it stand out. Sans serif fonts are chosen to seem more informal for the target audience of females aged 18-30. The chosen colors are purples and blues, as these were advised to suit the target audience better than other colors like pink. Blues represent qualities like trust and calmness, relating to the beach sunset cover image. Purples represent luxury, relevant to the magazine's luxury boutique shop contents. Darker blues and purples will mainly be used.
The magazine uses a layout with large images and minimal text to appeal to readers who prefer visuals over large blocks of text. Across its four pages, 12 images are used to engage visual learners. A consistent brand identity is created through the use of red and black colors and a sans serif font. Most images show male musicians in dark costumes, which aligns with the indie rock genre but could alienate female readers by lacking representation of women. Analyzing this magazine's design informed the student's own magazine creation process.
The document provides an analysis of the textual and visual elements of a magazine spread. It examines the main image, masthead, sell lines, and other design features. The main image is a close-up shot of an artist displaying frustration, with fire coming from his mouth to seem edgier. The masthead uses the magazine's recognizable colors. Sell lines promote interview content and artist names. Together the elements are designed to attract the target rock music audience.
The document discusses font and color choices for a rock music magazine. It notes that rock magazines typically use bold, dramatic fonts that stand out and reflect the confident nature of rock music. The author chooses black, red, and white as the color palette since they are associated with rock's dark, grungy lifestyle and have been used successfully in similar magazines. Using complementary colors will create a consistent house style that makes reading easy and enjoyable while clearly communicating the magazine's rock genre.
This document discusses the results of market research conducted to help design a new rock magazine. Key findings include:
- 87.5% of the target audience correctly identified the sample magazine as a rock magazine, showing the style conveyed the intended genre.
- Over half found the sample magazine's sell lines on the cover appealing, especially a question as a sell line.
- 37.5% found the sell lines uninteresting, so the new magazine should include more sell lines.
- Most would pay £2 for the magazine, so that is a good price point.
- The sample used mainly male images, so the new magazine needs a mix of male and female images to appear for both g
This document evaluates several fonts for their suitability in a pop magazine. It discusses the pros and cons of each font, and whether they would be appropriate for the genre and target audience. Some of the fonts are described as fun, funky, bold, and eye-catching, making them suitable for a pop magazine aimed at teenagers. However, other fonts may be too busy or not have enough character. The document considers whether each font would stand out while allowing the content to remain the focus.
The document analyzes the branding, design, and messaging techniques used in a Billboard magazine cover featuring Rihanna. It discusses how the serious portrait of Rihanna, her red hair and outfit, and mysterious pull quote establish a sophisticated yet engaging tone. The sans-serif typography, masthead, and use of colors create a modern aesthetic that appeals to Billboard's target demographic of teenagers and young adults across multiple music genres.
The document discusses font and color scheme choices for a magazine. For the magazine name, the author chose the Varsity font because it is unique and bold to attract attention. For the masthead text, New Athletic was selected as it is plain but bold to contrast nicely with the name font. The main text font is Ani Typewriter since it is easy to read but also unique looking. For the color scheme, a blue and green pastel scheme was finalized as it will provide an "indie" look when contrast is increased to seem hipster-inspired, reflecting the magazine's genre of indie rock.
This document summarizes how a media product challenges conventions of real magazines. It compares the layout of a real music magazine double page spread to the student's magazine on Lady Gaga. The student's magazine uses conventions like large quotes and columns but also develops conventions through using multiple unedited photos instead of one, including the page numbers on the pages rather than cut off, and incorporating a link to the article introduction in the title. The student spreads out the columns across the double page spread to make the article seem less time-consuming to read.
This document discusses potential magazine masthead fonts. The first font brings an element of "cool" but may not appeal to the target audience. The second font has associations with graffiti and street culture. The third font resembles childlike bubble writing and seems more child-friendly and informal, making it a suitable masthead for a magazine aimed at children.
The layout for my front page will follow the conventions of a pop magazineparis12346
1) The document explains the layout choices Paris Brett made for a magazine project. She chose to follow conventions from existing pop magazines like "We Love Pop" and "Top of the Pops".
2) Specific elements Paris included are a border, cover lines aligned like other magazines, barcodes in standard positions, free poster advertisements, and a "Poptastic" masthead.
3) The contents page will have three sections and the double page spread will feature a large celebrity interview following the example of "Top of the Pops". Throughout, the color scheme of pink and mint green is used.
The candidate evaluated 6 different font styles for the masthead of their magazine, comparing each to their inspiration of Kerrang magazine. They found that the fonts "Haze", "aBite", "Babalusa Cut", and "LA Street Kids" were all similar to Kerrang in style and well suited to their underground genre. However, "I the hero" was difficult to read and not similar to Kerrang. They selected "Brush Grunge" as the best option as its scratches and fading effect suited the genre of their magazine "UNKNWN" and had an edgy aesthetic.
Bethany Barrows is designing a magazine masthead and considers several font options. She analyzes each font's style, noting whether they appear professional, stylish, edgy, bold, unique, elegant, classic, or fitting for a music magazine. Barrows selects fonts that will stand out on the dark background and effectively fill the cover's top space to identify the magazine title.
The document outlines the design choices for a rock music magazine. It will be called "R" and feature a black, yellow, and white color scheme. The front cover will have a close-up shot of a face against a black background to look menacing. The inside pages will continue the color scheme and include both black and white and full color photos. The content and layout is designed to appeal to both male and female readers through a mix of visuals and text.
The document discusses how the magazine addressed its target audience of teenagers and indie music fans. Key points include:
- Using a bold sans serif font, drop shadows, and colored letters to make the title stand out and seem relevant to teenagers.
- Choosing a memorable tagline that encourages readers by saying "the nation loves this magazine."
- Incorporating familiar fonts from bands to create automatic familiarity and encourage buying.
- Including "Top 10" and "2013" on articles to seem up to date.
- Using images, colors, and capitalized text in articles to catch readers' attention.
- Employing direct address and recognizable fonts/layouts to
Reflection on research into products and audienceDaisyTarrant
The document reflects on inspiration taken from various music magazine front covers, contents pages, and double page spreads. Key elements of inspiration included a clean white background on a front cover, sectioning on a contents page, and bold pictures and headings on double page spreads. The reflections showed an interest in combining elements that create simplicity yet stand out, while still appropriately representing the targeted hip hop/rap genre.
The document discusses various fonts and design elements being considered for use in a magazine. For the masthead, the Laranjha Pro Fraco font is liked as it is simple and easy to read. For the main text, Calibri is liked as it is easy to read and professional looking. For the cover line, the Vanadine font is preferred as it is simplistic and sophisticated. Inspiration is taken from magazine covers showing medium close-up shots of models for the cover image. Poses using hands and busy backgrounds are noted. Double page spreads with articles and full images are preferred. Low angle informal shots and props like guitars are liked for content pages.
The document discusses potential font styles for the masthead of a new rap music magazine. It evaluates the fonts Marsneveneksk, Amsterdam Graffiti, Next Ups, and Philly Sans based on their ability to catch readers' eyes, appeal to the target demographic, convey attitude, and represent the rap genre. The author ultimately selects Next Ups as the final choice because it expresses attitude well while also being easy to read, allowing it to establish brand recognition. Most survey respondents preferred black and white as the masthead colors to connote attitude.
The document discusses font and color scheme choices for different elements of a music magazine, including the cover, contents page, and double-page spread. For the cover, the font Segoe Print was chosen to give a classic, fun style that appeals to the target market of older, higher-class readers. The contents page and double-page spread use consistent fonts and color schemes to provide uniformity throughout the magazine. The color scheme aims to be subtly eye-catching rather than bright like other pop magazines, using lighter pinks and purples to appeal to an older female audience.
The contents page uses a large image of famous rapper Kanye West to attract readers. His serious facial expression reflects his public image. Small text lists article topics. Sections include "Features" and "Fashion", reflecting the magazine's focus on both music and the fashion Kanye is involved in. A bit of red on Kanye's chest hints he may discuss personal matters. Overall the page emphasizes Kanye's celebrity to promote the magazine's content.
The document discusses font and color scheme choices for different elements of a music magazine, including the cover, contents page, and double-page spread. For the cover, the font Segoe Print was chosen to give a classic yet fun style that appeals to the target market of older, higher-class readers. On the contents page and flowing throughout, the font Niagara Solid is used because it is bold, clear, and grabs attention. The color scheme aims to be subtly eye-catching rather than bright like other pop magazines, using lighter pinks and purples to seem less tacky and appeal more to older females. Examples are provided of color schemes that could be used.
This document discusses how the author designed their magazine to attract their target audience of young music lovers interested in rock and gothic genres. They used gothic-inspired fonts, bold imagery featuring musicians, and clear layouts. Color choices of black, red, and yellow were meant to convey the rebellious and energetic spirit of rock music. Language features like band names, imperative phrases, and exclamation points were intended to excite and persuade readers to purchase the magazine. The overall design aimed to create a sense of connection and enjoyment for the audience.
The document discusses the author's process for planning and creating a contents page for their magazine called "Metal Entity". They go through multiple drafts, focusing on layout, image selection, font choices and keeping the design consistent with the rest of the magazine. They evaluate their final contents page as having an organized structure with a good use of images and fonts to represent the metal genre and draw in readers.
This document summarizes feedback on the first draft of a double page magazine spread. Reviewers liked the color scheme and how arrows moved through the pages, finding it captivating. However, they thought the page looked slightly empty and could be more complete. While the image and font choices made it look like a hip hop magazine, the content was deemed more suitable for an older audience of 18-21 year olds. Page numbers were a nice authentic touch. Reviewers suggested adding something else to fill out the page.
The document discusses three potential images for a magazine contents page. For the first image, the writer feels the model's pose and outfit suit the pop genre but it may be too similar to the front cover image. The second image is the writer's favorite as the model's expression and pose are well-suited to the magazine genre. Some edits were made to brighten her lips and remove the background. The third image was made black and white, which the writer feels makes the contrasts pop but may not suit the overall style. Both the pose and smiling face are effective but the color version may integrate better.
The document summarizes the planning for a music magazine, including choosing a color scheme of purple, grey, and black; fonts like "Coolvetica" and "A Love of Thunder"; photographs with models centered or to the side; and using some slang and exclamation points in the text to appeal to the target audience of young women aged 15-21.
This document provides a detailed analysis of the design elements used on magazine covers and contents pages. Key elements discussed include the use of prominent images, bold headlines, pull quotes, varied typefaces and colors to attract readers' attention and highlight important information. Color schemes and layouts are carefully crafted to intrigue audiences and entice them to purchase the magazines.
Model 1's name is Katie Robb. Her contact number is 01628525344 and email is Woollcotts@aol.com. A photo shoot was scheduled for May 3, 2011. An email was sent to Katie Robb asking if she would be interested in being a model for the magazine. Katie replied to the offer. The photo shoot included various shot types.
The document outlines the tasks involved in analyzing existing magazines, conducting research on audiences, planning and creating mock issues of a music magazine. It provides the task, due date, whether it was completed on time, and an explanation. Some of the key tasks included analyzing magazine covers, content, and spreads, creating audience questionnaires and mood boards, planning photo shoots and magazine layouts. Several tasks ran over deadline, including creating the front cover, contents page, and final evaluations, as these took significant time and required reviewing past work and research. Overall the process involved iterative research, planning, creation and evaluation over several weeks.
The document discusses font and color scheme choices for a magazine. For the magazine name, the author chose the Varsity font because it is unique and bold to attract attention. For the masthead text, New Athletic was selected as it is plain but bold to contrast nicely with the name font. The main text font is Ani Typewriter since it is easy to read but also unique looking. For the color scheme, a blue and green pastel scheme was finalized as it will provide an "indie" look when contrast is increased to seem hipster-inspired, reflecting the magazine's genre of indie rock.
This document summarizes how a media product challenges conventions of real magazines. It compares the layout of a real music magazine double page spread to the student's magazine on Lady Gaga. The student's magazine uses conventions like large quotes and columns but also develops conventions through using multiple unedited photos instead of one, including the page numbers on the pages rather than cut off, and incorporating a link to the article introduction in the title. The student spreads out the columns across the double page spread to make the article seem less time-consuming to read.
This document discusses potential magazine masthead fonts. The first font brings an element of "cool" but may not appeal to the target audience. The second font has associations with graffiti and street culture. The third font resembles childlike bubble writing and seems more child-friendly and informal, making it a suitable masthead for a magazine aimed at children.
The layout for my front page will follow the conventions of a pop magazineparis12346
1) The document explains the layout choices Paris Brett made for a magazine project. She chose to follow conventions from existing pop magazines like "We Love Pop" and "Top of the Pops".
2) Specific elements Paris included are a border, cover lines aligned like other magazines, barcodes in standard positions, free poster advertisements, and a "Poptastic" masthead.
3) The contents page will have three sections and the double page spread will feature a large celebrity interview following the example of "Top of the Pops". Throughout, the color scheme of pink and mint green is used.
The candidate evaluated 6 different font styles for the masthead of their magazine, comparing each to their inspiration of Kerrang magazine. They found that the fonts "Haze", "aBite", "Babalusa Cut", and "LA Street Kids" were all similar to Kerrang in style and well suited to their underground genre. However, "I the hero" was difficult to read and not similar to Kerrang. They selected "Brush Grunge" as the best option as its scratches and fading effect suited the genre of their magazine "UNKNWN" and had an edgy aesthetic.
Bethany Barrows is designing a magazine masthead and considers several font options. She analyzes each font's style, noting whether they appear professional, stylish, edgy, bold, unique, elegant, classic, or fitting for a music magazine. Barrows selects fonts that will stand out on the dark background and effectively fill the cover's top space to identify the magazine title.
The document outlines the design choices for a rock music magazine. It will be called "R" and feature a black, yellow, and white color scheme. The front cover will have a close-up shot of a face against a black background to look menacing. The inside pages will continue the color scheme and include both black and white and full color photos. The content and layout is designed to appeal to both male and female readers through a mix of visuals and text.
The document discusses how the magazine addressed its target audience of teenagers and indie music fans. Key points include:
- Using a bold sans serif font, drop shadows, and colored letters to make the title stand out and seem relevant to teenagers.
- Choosing a memorable tagline that encourages readers by saying "the nation loves this magazine."
- Incorporating familiar fonts from bands to create automatic familiarity and encourage buying.
- Including "Top 10" and "2013" on articles to seem up to date.
- Using images, colors, and capitalized text in articles to catch readers' attention.
- Employing direct address and recognizable fonts/layouts to
Reflection on research into products and audienceDaisyTarrant
The document reflects on inspiration taken from various music magazine front covers, contents pages, and double page spreads. Key elements of inspiration included a clean white background on a front cover, sectioning on a contents page, and bold pictures and headings on double page spreads. The reflections showed an interest in combining elements that create simplicity yet stand out, while still appropriately representing the targeted hip hop/rap genre.
The document discusses various fonts and design elements being considered for use in a magazine. For the masthead, the Laranjha Pro Fraco font is liked as it is simple and easy to read. For the main text, Calibri is liked as it is easy to read and professional looking. For the cover line, the Vanadine font is preferred as it is simplistic and sophisticated. Inspiration is taken from magazine covers showing medium close-up shots of models for the cover image. Poses using hands and busy backgrounds are noted. Double page spreads with articles and full images are preferred. Low angle informal shots and props like guitars are liked for content pages.
The document discusses potential font styles for the masthead of a new rap music magazine. It evaluates the fonts Marsneveneksk, Amsterdam Graffiti, Next Ups, and Philly Sans based on their ability to catch readers' eyes, appeal to the target demographic, convey attitude, and represent the rap genre. The author ultimately selects Next Ups as the final choice because it expresses attitude well while also being easy to read, allowing it to establish brand recognition. Most survey respondents preferred black and white as the masthead colors to connote attitude.
The document discusses font and color scheme choices for different elements of a music magazine, including the cover, contents page, and double-page spread. For the cover, the font Segoe Print was chosen to give a classic, fun style that appeals to the target market of older, higher-class readers. The contents page and double-page spread use consistent fonts and color schemes to provide uniformity throughout the magazine. The color scheme aims to be subtly eye-catching rather than bright like other pop magazines, using lighter pinks and purples to appeal to an older female audience.
The contents page uses a large image of famous rapper Kanye West to attract readers. His serious facial expression reflects his public image. Small text lists article topics. Sections include "Features" and "Fashion", reflecting the magazine's focus on both music and the fashion Kanye is involved in. A bit of red on Kanye's chest hints he may discuss personal matters. Overall the page emphasizes Kanye's celebrity to promote the magazine's content.
The document discusses font and color scheme choices for different elements of a music magazine, including the cover, contents page, and double-page spread. For the cover, the font Segoe Print was chosen to give a classic yet fun style that appeals to the target market of older, higher-class readers. On the contents page and flowing throughout, the font Niagara Solid is used because it is bold, clear, and grabs attention. The color scheme aims to be subtly eye-catching rather than bright like other pop magazines, using lighter pinks and purples to seem less tacky and appeal more to older females. Examples are provided of color schemes that could be used.
This document discusses how the author designed their magazine to attract their target audience of young music lovers interested in rock and gothic genres. They used gothic-inspired fonts, bold imagery featuring musicians, and clear layouts. Color choices of black, red, and yellow were meant to convey the rebellious and energetic spirit of rock music. Language features like band names, imperative phrases, and exclamation points were intended to excite and persuade readers to purchase the magazine. The overall design aimed to create a sense of connection and enjoyment for the audience.
The document discusses the author's process for planning and creating a contents page for their magazine called "Metal Entity". They go through multiple drafts, focusing on layout, image selection, font choices and keeping the design consistent with the rest of the magazine. They evaluate their final contents page as having an organized structure with a good use of images and fonts to represent the metal genre and draw in readers.
This document summarizes feedback on the first draft of a double page magazine spread. Reviewers liked the color scheme and how arrows moved through the pages, finding it captivating. However, they thought the page looked slightly empty and could be more complete. While the image and font choices made it look like a hip hop magazine, the content was deemed more suitable for an older audience of 18-21 year olds. Page numbers were a nice authentic touch. Reviewers suggested adding something else to fill out the page.
The document discusses three potential images for a magazine contents page. For the first image, the writer feels the model's pose and outfit suit the pop genre but it may be too similar to the front cover image. The second image is the writer's favorite as the model's expression and pose are well-suited to the magazine genre. Some edits were made to brighten her lips and remove the background. The third image was made black and white, which the writer feels makes the contrasts pop but may not suit the overall style. Both the pose and smiling face are effective but the color version may integrate better.
The document summarizes the planning for a music magazine, including choosing a color scheme of purple, grey, and black; fonts like "Coolvetica" and "A Love of Thunder"; photographs with models centered or to the side; and using some slang and exclamation points in the text to appeal to the target audience of young women aged 15-21.
This document provides a detailed analysis of the design elements used on magazine covers and contents pages. Key elements discussed include the use of prominent images, bold headlines, pull quotes, varied typefaces and colors to attract readers' attention and highlight important information. Color schemes and layouts are carefully crafted to intrigue audiences and entice them to purchase the magazines.
Model 1's name is Katie Robb. Her contact number is 01628525344 and email is Woollcotts@aol.com. A photo shoot was scheduled for May 3, 2011. An email was sent to Katie Robb asking if she would be interested in being a model for the magazine. Katie replied to the offer. The photo shoot included various shot types.
The document outlines the tasks involved in analyzing existing magazines, conducting research on audiences, planning and creating mock issues of a music magazine. It provides the task, due date, whether it was completed on time, and an explanation. Some of the key tasks included analyzing magazine covers, content, and spreads, creating audience questionnaires and mood boards, planning photo shoots and magazine layouts. Several tasks ran over deadline, including creating the front cover, contents page, and final evaluations, as these took significant time and required reviewing past work and research. Overall the process involved iterative research, planning, creation and evaluation over several weeks.
Evaluation: Reflection on audience feedbackamyrobb7
The document provides feedback on different elements of a music magazine called "UP BEAT".
For the front cover, feedback was positive about the title, use of bold purple color, and graffiti-style text which grabbed attention. However, the price text was noted as too small.
Feedback on the double-page spread liked how the title spanned two pages for dramatic impact and how the article was formatted. However, the pull quote did not stand out well.
For the contents page, feedback was positive about the clear section divisions, images providing insights, and personal editor's note. However, page numbers were missing from images.
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 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 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 discusses plans for a music magazine, including choosing a color scheme of purple, grey, and black; selecting the "Coolvetica" font; using casual photography with space for text; and addressing the target audience of 15-21 year old women using some slang.
The summaries are as follows:
1. Tom Batty conducted audience research on Rolling Stone magazine and found that the target age range and social grades aligned well with his goals. He noted the magazine appealed more to males but that adding his own style could broaden the appeal.
2. The document discusses key aspects of existing magazine covers, merchandise, and audience research findings. Common features included classic magazine layouts and prominent branding. Aspects that will be included are magazine cover styles and merchandise design elements.
3. Analysis of a questionnaire found that Rolling Stone was the favorite magazine due to its classic style. Personal interviews were more interesting than professional ones. While the audience skewed male, content will aim to
The document provides details on a proposed music magazine pitch called "Switch". The magazine would focus on rock, indie, and alternative music genres and target an audience aged 16-25. It would be published monthly at £5 per issue and include 140 pages. Proposed features include interviews, questions and answers from readers, reviews, competitions, articles and lists. The magazine would have a dark color scheme and edgy style to match the target genres. Photos would show bands on location in urban settings to seem down-to-earth. The cover would feature a band and the contents page would include photos and categorized text for easy navigation.
The document discusses planning the stylesheets for a new magazine, including:
1) Choosing a gender-neutral color scheme of red, white, and black to appeal to a wide audience.
2) Selecting the font "Demo" for the masthead as it closely relates to the magazine's goal of discussing new music.
3) Experimenting with different masthead colors and choosing red as it stands out and has passionate connotations fitting the magazine's theme.
The document discusses planning the stylesheets for a magazine, including:
1) Choosing a gender-neutral color scheme of red, white, and black to appeal to a wide audience.
2) Brainstorming masthead ideas and selecting "Demo" as it closely relates to discussing new music releases.
3) Choosing a bold yet youthful, readable font for the masthead that reflects the simple design.
4) Experimenting with different masthead colors and deciding on red as it stands out and has passionate connotations.
5) Testing body text fonts to be simple but interesting for younger readers.
6) Choosing fonts for cover lines, subheadings and ensuring they
This document analyzes and summarizes several magazine covers and contents pages. It discusses design elements like colors, images, and layouts and how they appeal to different target audiences. Key points made include:
- Bright, colorful covers with boy bands appeal to young female audiences
- Dark, aggressive covers featuring rock bands appeal to older audiences
- Contents pages can be easy to navigate while maintaining house style consistency
- Double page spreads set the tone for articles and keep readers engaged
- Different styles suit different music genres and audiences
The document discusses colour scheme options for a magazine targeted towards females aged 16-23. A light colour scheme is chosen to appeal to the target demographic based on survey results. Though a darker scheme may attract more males, it risks losing female consumers. While multiple colours were initially considered, a single prominent colour (yellow) is decided upon to avoid a gaudy appearance. Feedback from female readers supports the yellow scheme. Examples from other magazines inform the limited use of the yellow to achieve a professional look.
Choices Made When Creating my Music Magazinekhalfyard
The document discusses the choices made in designing the cover and contents page for a music magazine. For the cover, the designer used a close-up photo of Chelsey inspired by 1980s magazine covers. Cover lines advertise articles and competitions. The contents page continues the 1980s retro theme with ripped paper and Polaroid-style photos. Article names and page numbers are included to aid navigation. The double page spread features a large photo of interview subject Chelsey Denton with a pull quote from the interview as the heading.
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 discusses planning elements for the front cover of a magazine targeted towards 16-22 year olds, including font and color choices. The author selects a bold, modern font and the colors bright purple, grey, and small amounts of red. Bright purple is chosen to stand out and relate to the target audience, while grey provides contrast. The document also mentions using banners, boxes, slang language, and buzzwords in the magazine's content and design.
The document discusses planning elements for the front cover of a magazine targeted towards 16-22 year olds, including font and color choices. The author selects a bold, modern font and the colors bright purple, grey, and small amounts of red. Bright purple is chosen to stand out and relate to the target audience, while grey provides contrast. The document also mentions using banners, boxes, slang language, and buzzwords in the magazine's content and design.
This document discusses how the author addressed their target audience of females aged 14-24 for a music magazine. They aimed to attract this audience by using girly colors and styles, featuring fashion and exclusive celebrity information. They used an informal but appropriate tone for all ages and added visual elements like alliteration and different font sizes and colors to engage readers. Images included a variety of shot types and the magazine colors of pink, black, white and yellow created a feminine yet sophisticated design. Including different music genres and competitions provided broader appeal. An online presence and social media links made the magazine seem modern.
This document provides planning details for Nina Lima's fashion magazine titled "Modealisation". It includes research on existing magazine layouts, covers, and content pages to inspire Nina's own magazine design. Sample magazine names are presented to audiences and "Modealisation" is selected as the top choice. Font and image research is also included to inform the magazine's visual design. Draft cover, content page, and double-page spread layouts are presented with descriptions. The double-page spread will feature an interview with Nina as an up-and-coming fashion designer.
The document summarizes the key things the author learned in creating magazine front covers for a school magazine and music magazine. For the music magazine, the author used feedback from multiple drafts to improve the design. Some lessons learned were to make the masthead eye-catching, use color to draw attention to important text, stick to a limited color scheme, and include relevant content for the target audience. The author changed conventions like using a livelier font and darker, less conventional image for the music magazine that better suited the indie rock genre and younger audience.
Nicola Nightingale is choosing a font and masthead for her magazine targeted at young girls. She considers 9 different font options, commenting on whether each font would appeal to her target audience and be bold enough for a magazine cover. Her favorite option is the "Blenda Script" font because it is bold and joins up the lettering in a way that would appeal to young girls.
Zoë Bulmer plans the content and design of her indie music magazine. She takes inspiration from NME magazine covers, focusing on their use of block color. For her magazine name, she chooses "IndieGo" to represent the indie music genre and link to her color scheme. She develops plans for the cover, including placing the masthead left-aligned and using a studio photo of her model, Libby. Her contents page will feature columned text on the right and block colors at the bottom with social media links.
This document evaluates the author's music magazine. The author believes the cover fits conventions of music magazines through its alternative photograph and logo. The cover's minimal design is uncommon but enhances the photo. The editorial follows conventions but may take up too much space. Photographs are appropriate and article titles realistic. Feedback suggested changing a double-page color but the author thinks variety is good. The logo adds brand identity. Articles would appeal to readers but typography color could improve. Overall, the magazine suits its target mid-teen audience interested in alternative music through its informal tone, younger themes, and eye-catching design.
Similar to Planning: mood board and flat plan (20)
Here I have asked three people from my target audince to evaluate my magazine and pick out the good and not so good points. I used females and a male to give a fair view from both genders
5) how did you attract your target audience?amyrobb7
The document discusses techniques used to attract a target audience to a magazine. These techniques include using slang and informal language that the target audience would use, a sans-serif font for a less formal look, and images of models the target audience could identify with. Color choices like purple were meant to appeal more to the intended female readership. Market research found preferences for pricing, content types, and layout that were then applied to the magazine design.
Looking back at your preliminary task, what do you feel you have learnt in th...amyrobb7
The student learned several important skills when progressing from their preliminary magazine analysis task to creating their full magazine product. They learned how to use design programs like Photoshop and InDesign, gaining confidence in using them. They also improved their understanding of magazine conventions and audience research through analyzing sample magazines and collecting audience feedback. The preliminary work helped them apply these skills when creating a magazine that would appeal to their target audience.
2) how does your media product represent particular social groupsamyrobb7
The document summarizes how a magazine was designed to attract a target social group of "townies" aged 15-21 who enjoy hip-hop and R&B music. The magazine uses colloquial language, informal fonts and layout, photos of models and musicians styled like the target group, and scenes from urban locations to represent and appeal to the lifestyle and aesthetics of its young, urban readership.
Production: manipulation of original photographyamyrobb7
The document discusses the manipulation of several original photographs for use in a magazine. The photographs were edited by [1] adjusting colors, brightness, contrast and cropping to make subjects stand out; [2] cutting out backgrounds around subjects using selection tools; and [3] using smudge tools to blend colors and remove unwanted elements like grass. The goal of the edits was to make the photographs more dramatic, professional-looking and well-sized for the intended magazine layouts.
Here I have analysed the results from the continued audience feedback. I commented on what they said and stated the ways I could improve when I create my magazine.
The document provides feedback from 3 people (ages 15-20) on draft designs for the front cover, contents page, and double page spread of a magazine. For the front cover, 2 people preferred draft 3 for its prominent main image and skyline, while 1 preferred draft 1. For the contents page, 2 preferred draft 3 for its clear layout and use of an editor's note and image page numbers, while 1 preferred draft 1. For the double page spread, all 3 preferred draft 2 for its balanced text and images, article title spanning the pages, and large photos, but suggested moving the pull quote out of the middle of the text. The feedback will help improve the magazine designs.
Here is the audience feedback, three people in my target audience have been used to give their opinions on the drafts and choose which one they prefer. I have then looked at the results and analysed them to find what I need to improve on..
Three teenagers provided feedback on draft designs for the front cover, contents page, and double page article spreads for a magazine. For the front cover, they preferred designs with large prominent images and minimal text that catches the reader's attention. For the contents page, they liked designs that clearly displayed the articles and page numbers through a combination of images and captions. For the double page spreads, they responded best to a layout with balanced text and large images, a title spanning both pages, and pull quotes placed outside the main text. Overall, they found designs that presented content in a clear, visually interesting manner to be the most appealing.
The document outlines the tasks involved in analyzing existing magazines, conducting research on audiences, planning and creating mock issues of a music magazine. It provides the task, due date, whether it was completed on time, and an explanation. Some of the key tasks included analyzing magazine covers and content, conducting audience research through questionnaires, planning photo shoots and designs, creating covers, spreads and evaluating the process. Several tasks ran over deadline due to underestimating time or being delayed by previous overdue tasks, but most work was completed on schedule through planning and prioritizing effort.
The document discusses two drafts of a contents page layout. The first draft has the contents in one column, uses three images, and places the editor's note at the bottom. The second draft places the contents across the top of the page in an atypical layout, uses fewer images to be less distracting, and also places the editor's note at the bottom which is not priority for readers. Both drafts are evaluated as having simple yet effective designs.
The document discusses different layout options for a double page magazine spread. It provides feedback on three different draft layouts. For the first layout, it likes the unusual top and bottom images and use of pull quotes. For the second layout, it likes the title along the top and large subtitle but not the amount of copy. For the third layout, it dislikes the straight copy but likes the title along the top and large bottom image.
The document discusses different layout options for a double page magazine spread. It provides feedback on three different draft layouts. For the first layout, it likes the unusual top and bottom images and use of pull quotes. For the second layout, it likes the title along the top and large subtitle but not the amount of copy. For the third layout, it dislikes the straight copy but likes the title along the top and large bottom image.
The document discusses two draft designs for a contents page. The first draft has the contents in one column, images to build expectations, and an editor's note at the bottom. The second draft places the contents across the top to be the first thing seen, uses fewer images to be less distracting, and again places the editor's note at the bottom which readers may not read. Both drafts are evaluated as having simple yet effective designs.
The document discusses three draft magazine cover designs. For the first draft, the author likes the skyline image but not the many images at the bottom. For the second draft, it is simple with a cover line to attract readers but has many distracting images. For the third and best draft, it is simple and effective with a skyline, masthead at the top, one dramatic image, and sidebar text to entice readers to buy.
The document outlines the tasks, deadlines, and status of completing a school project to design a music magazine. It includes analyzing existing magazines, conducting audience research through questionnaires, planning photoshoots, creating layouts and designs, and evaluating the process. Most tasks were completed on time through organization and prioritizing easier tasks first. A few tasks ran over deadline including reflecting on analyses, front cover creation, and organizing props which required more time than anticipated. Overall the project was largely completed on schedule through time management and flexibility to catch up if needed.
The document summarizes the key learnings from analyzing various magazine covers, contents pages, double-page spreads, and conducting audience research. Some of the main techniques identified for effective design include using large images of famous artists on covers to draw attention, sectioning contents pages clearly, balancing images and text on double-page spreads, and incorporating a variety of music genres and interests to attract a wide audience. Market research revealed that the target audience prefers magazines monthly with a price of £2-3 focusing on music news, reviews, and interviews.
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
June 3, 2024 Anti-Semitism Letter Sent to MIT President Kornbluth and MIT Cor...Levi Shapiro
Letter from the Congress of the United States regarding Anti-Semitism sent June 3rd to MIT President Sally Kornbluth, MIT Corp Chair, Mark Gorenberg
Dear Dr. Kornbluth and Mr. Gorenberg,
The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
This Congress will not stand idly by and allow an environment hostile to Jewish students to persist. The House believes that your institution is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and the inability or
unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
The House of Representatives will not countenance the use of federal funds to indoctrinate students into hateful, antisemitic, anti-American supporters of terrorism. Investigations into campus antisemitism by the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Ways and Means have been expanded into a Congress-wide probe across all relevant jurisdictions to address this national crisis. The undersigned Committees will conduct oversight into the use of federal funds at MIT and its learning environment under authorities granted to each Committee.
• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
• The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is investigating the sources of funding and other support flowing to groups espousing pro-Hamas propaganda and engaged in antisemitic harassment and intimidation of students. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is the principal oversight committee of the US House of Representatives and has broad authority to investigate “any matter” at “any time” under House Rule X.
• The Committee on Ways and Means has been investigating several universities since November 15, 2023, when the Committee held a hearing entitled From Ivory Towers to Dark Corners: Investigating the Nexus Between Antisemitism, Tax-Exempt Universities, and Terror Financing. The Committee followed the hearing with letters to those institutions on January 10, 202
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
This presentation was provided by Steph Pollock of The American Psychological Association’s Journals Program, and Damita Snow, of The American Society of Civil Engineers (ASCE), for the initial session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session One: 'Setting Expectations: a DEIA Primer,' was held June 6, 2024.
Biological screening of herbal drugs: Introduction and Need for
Phyto-Pharmacological Screening, New Strategies for evaluating
Natural Products, In vitro evaluation techniques for Antioxidants, Antimicrobial and Anticancer drugs. In vivo evaluation techniques
for Anti-inflammatory, Antiulcer, Anticancer, Wound healing, Antidiabetic, Hepatoprotective, Cardio protective, Diuretics and
Antifertility, Toxicity studies as per OECD guidelines
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
6. Photo shootGenre:<br />The genre of my magazine is a mixture, mainly RnB, Dance, DnB, pop and hip hop. I tried to incorporate a range of music genres so it will appeal to more people. My target audience is mainly young women aged 15 – 21. By including more genres more people in my target audience will be drawn to it.<br />Colour Scheme<br />This is my favourite colour scheme, the dramatic bright purple stands out on the grey and black. I think this colour scheme would be appropriate for my music magazine.This colour scheme is good, the grey would be the background which could be better then have a white which looks like an empty space. The bright pink would attract attention to it therefore appropriate for the magazine.I like this colour scheme too, the bright blue is appropriate for my target audience it draws attention to it. If I used this colour scheme the white background would make the black and blue copy stand out a lot.I like this colour scheme, the colours complement each other making each one stand out. The purple is quite a dramatic colour which draws attention to it. I will use this for my colour scheme because I think it is dramatic and will appeal to my target audience.<br />Font Styles<br />Europe Underground Worn: I like this font because it has an edge to it, the lines that go through it make it look casual yet dramatic. I think it would suit my target audience and attract them to the magazine because it looks fun and not too smart/serious. Neuropolitical: This font is up to date and edgy, it looks like something my target audience. This font is very bold because of the thick lines used, it creates a dramatic impact. This means it will stand out on my front cover. However this font is a little difficult to read, for example, the ‘a’ does not look like an ‘a’.Acidic: This font is very different, it looks like vibrations are coming through the text. This would be an appropriate font to use for a music magazine. However I do not think this font will stand out that much, it is a little faint and won’t draw attention to it.Coolvetica: I like this font, it is quite fun and trendy. I think it will appeal to my target audience because it is trendy. It is bold because of the thick lines used. This means it will stand out on my front cover in any colour so it could be the font I choose. I think I will use this font on my magazine.-2070102219960-2190757053580-2070105450205-2901953763645-219075521970A love of thunder: This font bold and eye catching, something a mast heading should be. I like how it is all in capitals so it looks dramatic. It suits my teenage target audience because it looks trendy and dramatic.<br />Flashes and Camera Shots<br />Right aligned shot: this shot is similar to the previous shot. It allows the attentions to be focused on the model and still show the surroundings. The empty space next to the model will allow me to put text there.Left aligned shot: this shot draws attention to the model however you see more of the background. This would be good to use in my magazine because it allows me to put text around the model. Centre frame: this focuses on the model in the photo. You also get to see the surrounding background. This shot is good to use to draw attention to my model.I like this flash, it has rounded edges which make it look less formal/serious, I think my target audience would prefer this because of the shape. It would be easy to insert text into it. If this shape was in a bright colour it would draw the audience to it.This shape is a little boring, because of the shape of it attention will be drawn to it. It may be difficult to insert text in it that will fit because of its circular edge.I don’t particularly like this flash, it looks a little childish something that wouldn’t appeal to my teenage target audience. Because of the shape it could be difficult to put text in it that will fit. It looks tacky however the shape if different which will draw people to it.<br />Mode of address<br />I think slang will be appropriate for my magazine because the mode of address is what mode teenagers use in their day to day lives. They will be able to relate to it and may be more inclined to buy a magazine that uses some slang language rather than formal language.Slang<br />This mode of address is very formal. It is all proper English with no slang. I do not think I will use this for my magazine because teenagers may not relate to it. Adults like to read magazines with proper English but teenagers prefer ‘slang’. If teenagers see a music magazine with proper English text on the front it may put them off.The Queens English<br />The use of exclamation marks can be a good and bad thing. If you use too many it can look tacky and put you off. However if you use them appropriately then it can draw attention to it in the right way. I think I will use some exclamation marks but not excessively. My target audience may like to see exclamation marks because it will look less formal and more fun.Use of exclam-ation marks <br />Numbers instead of lettersI may use numbers instead of letters however it can look a little tacky. You expect to see lots of numbers instead of letters on a child’s magazine so I am not sure if it would appeal to my target audience. If it is appropriate and used in the right way to attract attention I may consider using them.<br />Images<br />3165475265938026797026949402647104425863171683442586<br />32372302581910<br />26797045085<br />Photo shoot<br />4068445141605222758017684754375785176847528003517684752783571423352093510142335<br />22275801212852679701644654377055164465<br />2585085494030435610494030-1524000494030<br />-3848102160905Flat Plan For My Magazine <br />