The document summarizes the results of a survey about homelessness. It includes 10 questions on topics like the age and location of respondents, what they would do if they became homeless, and their perceptions of homelessness. Key findings include: most respondents were ages 17-19; more females said they would help a homeless youth than males; over half said they would not know what to do if they became homeless; and some responses showed negative judgments about homeless people. The survey aimed to understand views of homelessness among young adults and identify what age groups may be most at risk.
This document outlines 3 ideas for mood boards, with each idea containing images, colours, and fonts to convey a mood or theme. The 3 ideas are not further described but provide the basic elements of images, colours, and fonts to explore different moods or themes through visual representation.
This document summarizes different page layout styles for newspapers, magazines, and newspaper covers. It describes common elements of a double page newspaper spread such as columns, margins, baselines, page numbers, and datelines. It also outlines features of a double page magazine spread like drop caps, white space, headlines, grids, and page numbers. Additionally, it notes elements for a newspaper cover including cutouts, graphics, headlines, straplines, columns, and reversed text.
This document shows the final front cover and two double page spreads from a fanzine produced by Katie Torpey. The front cover displays the title of the fanzine. The double page spreads feature layouts with images and text discussing the fanzine's content.
The feedback provided comments on designs for a broadsheet newspaper, tabloid newspaper, and two fanzines. For the broadsheet, the feedback noted that the McDonald's ad in the middle stood out too much due to its bold color. For the fanzines, the feedback praised the use of color in the first fanzine and the full-page image in the second fanzine, but noted the text was difficult to read against the background color. The designer agreed that the McDonald's ad drew too much attention and that the text color could be darkened in the second fanzine, but disagreed that the text was illegible.
This style sheet outlines the formatting for a real estate publication, including title fonts, body fonts, images, and a color scheme. It also provides flat plans for three front page articles that will be featured in the publication.
Katie Torpey sought feedback on her designs from peers through a PowerPoint presentation. She received both positive and critical feedback on her broadsheets, tabloids, and fanzines. The feedback helped her identify strengths and areas for improvement. For example, peers noted that the font choices for her tabloids were appropriate but the margins could be clearer. Overall, the peer feedback process provided qualitative insights that Katie found useful for refining her designs.
This document provides a summary of feedback received on various design projects and an evaluation of time management and creative development throughout the projects. The key points are:
1) Peer feedback was received on broadsheet, tabloid, and fanzine designs which provided both positive and constructive criticism. This feedback helped identify improvements that could be made.
2) Time management was improved over the course of the projects, with better use of scheduling and target setting. Earlier projects showed less organized time management.
3) Creative abilities developed through tasks like typography and fanzine design that required non-traditional approaches. Further experimentation could continue to enhance the creative skills.
The document summarizes the results of a survey about homelessness. It includes 10 questions on topics like the age and location of respondents, what they would do if they became homeless, and their perceptions of homelessness. Key findings include: most respondents were ages 17-19; more females said they would help a homeless youth than males; over half said they would not know what to do if they became homeless; and some responses showed negative judgments about homeless people. The survey aimed to understand views of homelessness among young adults and identify what age groups may be most at risk.
This document outlines 3 ideas for mood boards, with each idea containing images, colours, and fonts to convey a mood or theme. The 3 ideas are not further described but provide the basic elements of images, colours, and fonts to explore different moods or themes through visual representation.
This document summarizes different page layout styles for newspapers, magazines, and newspaper covers. It describes common elements of a double page newspaper spread such as columns, margins, baselines, page numbers, and datelines. It also outlines features of a double page magazine spread like drop caps, white space, headlines, grids, and page numbers. Additionally, it notes elements for a newspaper cover including cutouts, graphics, headlines, straplines, columns, and reversed text.
This document shows the final front cover and two double page spreads from a fanzine produced by Katie Torpey. The front cover displays the title of the fanzine. The double page spreads feature layouts with images and text discussing the fanzine's content.
The feedback provided comments on designs for a broadsheet newspaper, tabloid newspaper, and two fanzines. For the broadsheet, the feedback noted that the McDonald's ad in the middle stood out too much due to its bold color. For the fanzines, the feedback praised the use of color in the first fanzine and the full-page image in the second fanzine, but noted the text was difficult to read against the background color. The designer agreed that the McDonald's ad drew too much attention and that the text color could be darkened in the second fanzine, but disagreed that the text was illegible.
This style sheet outlines the formatting for a real estate publication, including title fonts, body fonts, images, and a color scheme. It also provides flat plans for three front page articles that will be featured in the publication.
Katie Torpey sought feedback on her designs from peers through a PowerPoint presentation. She received both positive and critical feedback on her broadsheets, tabloids, and fanzines. The feedback helped her identify strengths and areas for improvement. For example, peers noted that the font choices for her tabloids were appropriate but the margins could be clearer. Overall, the peer feedback process provided qualitative insights that Katie found useful for refining her designs.
This document provides a summary of feedback received on various design projects and an evaluation of time management and creative development throughout the projects. The key points are:
1) Peer feedback was received on broadsheet, tabloid, and fanzine designs which provided both positive and constructive criticism. This feedback helped identify improvements that could be made.
2) Time management was improved over the course of the projects, with better use of scheduling and target setting. Earlier projects showed less organized time management.
3) Creative abilities developed through tasks like typography and fanzine design that required non-traditional approaches. Further experimentation could continue to enhance the creative skills.
This document appears to be a production log for tabloid newspapers. It lists Katie Torpey as working on Tabloid Production Task 8 and includes entries for "Final Tabloid 1" and "Final Tabloid 2", suggesting it tracked the completion of two tabloid issues.
This style sheet document outlines fonts and formatting for different sections of a publication including the masthead, headlines, and body text. It also includes references to three flat plan designs or layouts.
This document is a production log for broadsheets. It lists the tasks of broadsheet production including two final broadsheets that were produced. The log provides a high-level overview of the broadsheet production process and outputs without detailed information or context.
This document discusses various elements of page layouts for newspapers and magazines, including double page spreads, columns, grids, headlines, cutouts, pull quotes, and other design features like orientation, margins, baselines, and use of graphics. Key elements that define different layout types are described, such as datelines, page numbers, and use of color or white space for newspaper front covers, articles, and magazine spreads.
This document outlines 13 experiments conducted for a typography task. Each experiment is numbered and briefly listed without further details about the specific experiments, results, or conclusions. The document provides a high-level listing of 13 experiments conducted for a typography project.
This style sheet document contains recommendations for fonts to use for mastheads, headlines, and body text, as well as examples of flat plan layouts. It lists Bernard MT Condensed, Charlemagne std Bold, and Arial, Arial Rounded MT Bold, Calibri, and Avenir Medium as suggested masthead and headline fonts. Arial, Times New Roman, Georgia, and Verdana are among over 20 fonts listed as options for body text. The document also includes sections for images and examples of four flat plan layouts.
This document provides style sheet recommendations for a publication including suggested fonts for mastheads, headlines, body text, and images. It lists over 30 font options for headlines and body text in various styles including serif, sans serif, decorative, and display fonts. Sample page layouts called "Flat Plans" numbered 1 through 4 are also referenced but not described.
This style sheet document provides recommendations for fonts to use in different elements of a publication layout. It lists Bernard MT Condensed, Adobe Caslon Pro Bold, and Charlemagne std Bold as options for masthead fonts. Arial, Arial Rounded MT Bold, Calibri, and Corbel are listed as body font options. The document also includes subject headers for images of hippies, the Woodstock Festival, and four flat plan designs.
This document provides a style sheet listing font options for headlines, body text, and images for a publication about hippies and the Woodstock Festival across 4 page layouts. It includes sans serif, serif, and decorative fonts such as Arial, Times New Roman, and Baskerville that could be used for headlines and body text. Images related to hippies and the Woodstock Festival are also mentioned.
This document discusses 6 experiments related to typography. The document does not provide any details about the individual experiments, their methods, results or conclusions. It only lists the experiment numbers and titles without further information.
This document contains 3 posters with no other context provided. It appears to be listing 3 different posters but provides no information on what the posters are about or their content. The document simply lists "Poster 1", "Poster 2", and "Poster 3" with no other details given.
This document discusses creating page layouts and contains 4 numbered sections for page layouts. The document appears to be instructions or notes for creating different page layouts, labeling them Page Layout 1 through Page Layout 4.
This newspaper article from The Sun reports on an alleged attack on a former model, Alicia Douvall, by her ex-boyfriend. The headline uses attention-grabbing language to summarize that the ex-boyfriend "battered" Douvall as she drove her car. The article includes a large photo of Douvall with bruises on her face and quotes from her describing the attack. While only telling the story from Douvall's perspective, the article cites her as the source of information and avoids naming the ex-boyfriend since he has only been arrested, not charged, to prevent legal issues like libel.
1) The document outlines three double exposure experiments the photographer plans to conduct for a college project between January 31st and February 7th 2014 using a DSLR camera.
2) The first experiment involves combining an image of a model with an image related to their emotion, such as placing an image of something frightening inside the outline of the model.
3) The second experiment involves overlaying two images of a model - one emotionless and one expressing an emotion - to show how people present emotions differently than how they actually feel.
4) The third experiment involves taking outdoor images of various subjects and headshots, then combining different subject-headshot pairs that look good together.
The document outlines a photography project that will use double exposure techniques. It will photograph various subjects including nature, cars, buildings, portraits of friends and family, and landscapes that represent different emotions. Images will be taken at home, local parks, villages, and York College studio for better lighting. The techniques of overlaying and reducing opacity between images in Photoshop and the camera's double exposure mode will be used to combine multiple photos. The goal is to experiment with different subjects, models, locations, and editing methods to develop skills and find an interesting creative style.
Katie Torpey has proposed several themes for her photography project on discovery: emotion, fashion, locations, animals, and nature. For the emotion theme, she plans to use double exposure and Harris shutter techniques to show how people look on the outside versus how they feel inside. She also wants to represent emotions through associated images like sunshine for happiness. For fashion, she will use double exposure to combine models with outfits and styles, and multimedia techniques to incorporate graphics. For locations, her techniques include multiple exposure, double exposure of people in landscapes, and movement photography in busy areas. Animals may be depicted through double exposure of animal and human faces, as well as fast and slow shutter speeds to capture motion. Nature could be explored
The document is a mind map created by Katie Torpey for Task 4. It appears to brainstorm and connect various ideas related to the given task. In a concise yet high-level manner, the mind map helps organize Katie's thoughts as she works to complete Task 4.
Multiple exposure is a technique where two or more exposures are combined into a single image. This can be done on film by exposing the film multiple times without advancing to the next frame, or on digital cameras which have a multiple exposure setting. The Harris shutter technique exposes the same frame through different colored filters, resulting in colors appearing around moving subjects based on the filter color. Scanography involves arranging objects on a scanner glass and scanning them to create abstract digital images with fine details and a shallow depth of field. Special care must be taken with delicate objects and the scanner glass.
This document discusses an experimental photography project focused on different techniques. It includes sections on movement photography using a model with different poses against red, black, and textured backgrounds. It also covers out of focus photography using lamps, jelly beans, and street lights. Additional sections discuss reflection photography using mirrors and windows. The final section is on montage photography where multiple photos of a painting were taken from different angles and combined in Photoshop.
David Hockney is a British artist considered one of the most influential of the 20th century. In the 1980s, he pioneered a new technique called "The Joiners" where he took Polaroid photos of scenes from various angles and arrangements and glued them together into photo collages, later expanding this to include color prints. Hannah Hoch was a German artist known as one of the originators of photo montage, where she combined different art mediums like photos, illustrations, and paintings into collages. Man Ray was an American artist who pioneered photograms, which he called "rayographs," made by arranging objects on light-sensitive paper and exposing it to light to create unique abstract images without using a
This document appears to be a production log for tabloid newspapers. It lists Katie Torpey as working on Tabloid Production Task 8 and includes entries for "Final Tabloid 1" and "Final Tabloid 2", suggesting it tracked the completion of two tabloid issues.
This style sheet document outlines fonts and formatting for different sections of a publication including the masthead, headlines, and body text. It also includes references to three flat plan designs or layouts.
This document is a production log for broadsheets. It lists the tasks of broadsheet production including two final broadsheets that were produced. The log provides a high-level overview of the broadsheet production process and outputs without detailed information or context.
This document discusses various elements of page layouts for newspapers and magazines, including double page spreads, columns, grids, headlines, cutouts, pull quotes, and other design features like orientation, margins, baselines, and use of graphics. Key elements that define different layout types are described, such as datelines, page numbers, and use of color or white space for newspaper front covers, articles, and magazine spreads.
This document outlines 13 experiments conducted for a typography task. Each experiment is numbered and briefly listed without further details about the specific experiments, results, or conclusions. The document provides a high-level listing of 13 experiments conducted for a typography project.
This style sheet document contains recommendations for fonts to use for mastheads, headlines, and body text, as well as examples of flat plan layouts. It lists Bernard MT Condensed, Charlemagne std Bold, and Arial, Arial Rounded MT Bold, Calibri, and Avenir Medium as suggested masthead and headline fonts. Arial, Times New Roman, Georgia, and Verdana are among over 20 fonts listed as options for body text. The document also includes sections for images and examples of four flat plan layouts.
This document provides style sheet recommendations for a publication including suggested fonts for mastheads, headlines, body text, and images. It lists over 30 font options for headlines and body text in various styles including serif, sans serif, decorative, and display fonts. Sample page layouts called "Flat Plans" numbered 1 through 4 are also referenced but not described.
This style sheet document provides recommendations for fonts to use in different elements of a publication layout. It lists Bernard MT Condensed, Adobe Caslon Pro Bold, and Charlemagne std Bold as options for masthead fonts. Arial, Arial Rounded MT Bold, Calibri, and Corbel are listed as body font options. The document also includes subject headers for images of hippies, the Woodstock Festival, and four flat plan designs.
This document provides a style sheet listing font options for headlines, body text, and images for a publication about hippies and the Woodstock Festival across 4 page layouts. It includes sans serif, serif, and decorative fonts such as Arial, Times New Roman, and Baskerville that could be used for headlines and body text. Images related to hippies and the Woodstock Festival are also mentioned.
This document discusses 6 experiments related to typography. The document does not provide any details about the individual experiments, their methods, results or conclusions. It only lists the experiment numbers and titles without further information.
This document contains 3 posters with no other context provided. It appears to be listing 3 different posters but provides no information on what the posters are about or their content. The document simply lists "Poster 1", "Poster 2", and "Poster 3" with no other details given.
This document discusses creating page layouts and contains 4 numbered sections for page layouts. The document appears to be instructions or notes for creating different page layouts, labeling them Page Layout 1 through Page Layout 4.
This newspaper article from The Sun reports on an alleged attack on a former model, Alicia Douvall, by her ex-boyfriend. The headline uses attention-grabbing language to summarize that the ex-boyfriend "battered" Douvall as she drove her car. The article includes a large photo of Douvall with bruises on her face and quotes from her describing the attack. While only telling the story from Douvall's perspective, the article cites her as the source of information and avoids naming the ex-boyfriend since he has only been arrested, not charged, to prevent legal issues like libel.
1) The document outlines three double exposure experiments the photographer plans to conduct for a college project between January 31st and February 7th 2014 using a DSLR camera.
2) The first experiment involves combining an image of a model with an image related to their emotion, such as placing an image of something frightening inside the outline of the model.
3) The second experiment involves overlaying two images of a model - one emotionless and one expressing an emotion - to show how people present emotions differently than how they actually feel.
4) The third experiment involves taking outdoor images of various subjects and headshots, then combining different subject-headshot pairs that look good together.
The document outlines a photography project that will use double exposure techniques. It will photograph various subjects including nature, cars, buildings, portraits of friends and family, and landscapes that represent different emotions. Images will be taken at home, local parks, villages, and York College studio for better lighting. The techniques of overlaying and reducing opacity between images in Photoshop and the camera's double exposure mode will be used to combine multiple photos. The goal is to experiment with different subjects, models, locations, and editing methods to develop skills and find an interesting creative style.
Katie Torpey has proposed several themes for her photography project on discovery: emotion, fashion, locations, animals, and nature. For the emotion theme, she plans to use double exposure and Harris shutter techniques to show how people look on the outside versus how they feel inside. She also wants to represent emotions through associated images like sunshine for happiness. For fashion, she will use double exposure to combine models with outfits and styles, and multimedia techniques to incorporate graphics. For locations, her techniques include multiple exposure, double exposure of people in landscapes, and movement photography in busy areas. Animals may be depicted through double exposure of animal and human faces, as well as fast and slow shutter speeds to capture motion. Nature could be explored
The document is a mind map created by Katie Torpey for Task 4. It appears to brainstorm and connect various ideas related to the given task. In a concise yet high-level manner, the mind map helps organize Katie's thoughts as she works to complete Task 4.
Multiple exposure is a technique where two or more exposures are combined into a single image. This can be done on film by exposing the film multiple times without advancing to the next frame, or on digital cameras which have a multiple exposure setting. The Harris shutter technique exposes the same frame through different colored filters, resulting in colors appearing around moving subjects based on the filter color. Scanography involves arranging objects on a scanner glass and scanning them to create abstract digital images with fine details and a shallow depth of field. Special care must be taken with delicate objects and the scanner glass.
This document discusses an experimental photography project focused on different techniques. It includes sections on movement photography using a model with different poses against red, black, and textured backgrounds. It also covers out of focus photography using lamps, jelly beans, and street lights. Additional sections discuss reflection photography using mirrors and windows. The final section is on montage photography where multiple photos of a painting were taken from different angles and combined in Photoshop.
David Hockney is a British artist considered one of the most influential of the 20th century. In the 1980s, he pioneered a new technique called "The Joiners" where he took Polaroid photos of scenes from various angles and arrangements and glued them together into photo collages, later expanding this to include color prints. Hannah Hoch was a German artist known as one of the originators of photo montage, where she combined different art mediums like photos, illustrations, and paintings into collages. Man Ray was an American artist who pioneered photograms, which he called "rayographs," made by arranging objects on light-sensitive paper and exposing it to light to create unique abstract images without using a