This document outlines the pre-production materials and processes for creating a new music magazine called "Musique". It includes details on setting up equipment costs, staff costs, pre-production plans such as hand-drawn drafts, layouts, photography plans, and production schedules. It also provides step-by-step guides for creating elements like the front cover, inside pages, and back cover using desktop publishing tools. The document concludes by discussing font styles, house styles, and an overview of the planning and tools used to produce a high-quality print magazine.
The document outlines the slides from a presentation on producing a magazine. It includes slides on feedback received, improvements made to the front cover and main image, presentation improvements, the production process, launch date, estimated costs and budget, magazine pricing, ethical and legal issues, copyright, and concluding remarks. The document provides details on the content and organization of the presentation.
The document outlines the production process for a magazine, including:
1) Managers from all departments will create a pre-production plan with timelines and deadlines. Budgets for staff pay, office rent, marketing, website costs, and printing are allocated.
2) An editorial board will create a content plan deciding topics and items for the new issue. Authors are given budgets for reporting and assigned photographers and equipment.
3) Stories and articles are written, photographs taken, and content added to pages by graphic designers using software like Photoshop and InDesign. Sub-editing checks facts and style. Layout staff use InDesign to typeset pages.
This document outlines the production process for a magazine. It involves 8 key stages: 1) planning the production schedule, 2) editorial decisions on content and design, 3) acquiring content through writing and photography, 4) sub-editing for accuracy and style, 5) creating the page layout, 6) proofreading, 7) printing, and 8) distribution. Key personnel include the editor, writers, art director, and photo editor. Their various roles in content creation, design, fact-checking, and oversight of the process are described. Timeframes for different stages like research, editing, and proofreading are also provided.
The document discusses the process of constructing a magazine mockup in Photoshop. Key points:
- The front page was constructed with a green background and masthead in top left, listing articles on the left using different fonts. The RM logo was made with a custom font and positioned in a red box.
- Photos were edited using the magic wand and blur tools to cut out backgrounds and refine edges.
- The contents page listed articles in a grid aligned using Photoshop's grid.
- The double page article section included a columned text layout with title and description, on a landscape A3 page with a grey bar for page number.
- Additional elements like the website, date
The document outlines the key steps involved in producing a music magazine from start to finish, including:
1) Creating a production schedule with deadlines to allow planning and accommodate any issues.
2) Deciding on content, gathering materials like articles, photos and graphics, and designing page layouts.
3) Implementing editing checks to ensure accuracy, proper style and formatting before printing.
4) Sending files to the printer to produce copies for final inspection and mass production for distribution to shops and warehouses for public sale. The process aims to get the magazine to readers on time and to a high standard.
This document provides details for 30 slides related to the development of a magazine proposal. It includes sections on the presentation environment, personal presentation, two magazine proposals ("Jump" and "BASS"), promotion strategies, website and production costs, budgets, distribution plans, target audiences, and example slides. The document gives an overview of the content and considerations for launching a new dance and clubbing magazine.
The document outlines the production process and timeline for a magazine called 'REVAMP'. It involves researching the production process, roles, costs, and circulation figures over a period of 3 weeks in November 2014. The key stages of magazine production include setting a publication date, managing the schedule, budgeting, collecting content, sub-editing, page layout, proofreading, printing, and distribution. Production roles include print editors, production staff, and print writers who work together to publish the magazine on schedule and fit for purpose.
The document describes the steps taken to create a double page spread for a music magazine in Adobe Photoshop and InDesign. It involves selecting and editing photographs, adding backgrounds, quotes, and descriptions. Frames are created in InDesign and the edited photos, titles, and article text from Word are placed. A header is also added from a real magazine sample to complete the spread.
The document outlines the slides from a presentation on producing a magazine. It includes slides on feedback received, improvements made to the front cover and main image, presentation improvements, the production process, launch date, estimated costs and budget, magazine pricing, ethical and legal issues, copyright, and concluding remarks. The document provides details on the content and organization of the presentation.
The document outlines the production process for a magazine, including:
1) Managers from all departments will create a pre-production plan with timelines and deadlines. Budgets for staff pay, office rent, marketing, website costs, and printing are allocated.
2) An editorial board will create a content plan deciding topics and items for the new issue. Authors are given budgets for reporting and assigned photographers and equipment.
3) Stories and articles are written, photographs taken, and content added to pages by graphic designers using software like Photoshop and InDesign. Sub-editing checks facts and style. Layout staff use InDesign to typeset pages.
This document outlines the production process for a magazine. It involves 8 key stages: 1) planning the production schedule, 2) editorial decisions on content and design, 3) acquiring content through writing and photography, 4) sub-editing for accuracy and style, 5) creating the page layout, 6) proofreading, 7) printing, and 8) distribution. Key personnel include the editor, writers, art director, and photo editor. Their various roles in content creation, design, fact-checking, and oversight of the process are described. Timeframes for different stages like research, editing, and proofreading are also provided.
The document discusses the process of constructing a magazine mockup in Photoshop. Key points:
- The front page was constructed with a green background and masthead in top left, listing articles on the left using different fonts. The RM logo was made with a custom font and positioned in a red box.
- Photos were edited using the magic wand and blur tools to cut out backgrounds and refine edges.
- The contents page listed articles in a grid aligned using Photoshop's grid.
- The double page article section included a columned text layout with title and description, on a landscape A3 page with a grey bar for page number.
- Additional elements like the website, date
The document outlines the key steps involved in producing a music magazine from start to finish, including:
1) Creating a production schedule with deadlines to allow planning and accommodate any issues.
2) Deciding on content, gathering materials like articles, photos and graphics, and designing page layouts.
3) Implementing editing checks to ensure accuracy, proper style and formatting before printing.
4) Sending files to the printer to produce copies for final inspection and mass production for distribution to shops and warehouses for public sale. The process aims to get the magazine to readers on time and to a high standard.
This document provides details for 30 slides related to the development of a magazine proposal. It includes sections on the presentation environment, personal presentation, two magazine proposals ("Jump" and "BASS"), promotion strategies, website and production costs, budgets, distribution plans, target audiences, and example slides. The document gives an overview of the content and considerations for launching a new dance and clubbing magazine.
The document outlines the production process and timeline for a magazine called 'REVAMP'. It involves researching the production process, roles, costs, and circulation figures over a period of 3 weeks in November 2014. The key stages of magazine production include setting a publication date, managing the schedule, budgeting, collecting content, sub-editing, page layout, proofreading, printing, and distribution. Production roles include print editors, production staff, and print writers who work together to publish the magazine on schedule and fit for purpose.
The document describes the steps taken to create a double page spread for a music magazine in Adobe Photoshop and InDesign. It involves selecting and editing photographs, adding backgrounds, quotes, and descriptions. Frames are created in InDesign and the edited photos, titles, and article text from Word are placed. A header is also added from a real magazine sample to complete the spread.
The document provides information across multiple slides related to the production of two magazines - TeensRule and RockStars. It includes witness statements, corrections made to photoshop work, a survey monkey breakdown, production plans, a four week production schedule, calendar events, profit and loss breakdowns, location recces, proposals, photoshoot plans, equipment and staff costs, definitions of royalties and watermarks, and information on data protection acts. The document covers various aspects of planning, designing, and producing the two magazines from initial concepts through financial considerations.
The document describes the steps taken to create a double page magazine spread in Adobe Photoshop and InDesign. Key steps include:
1) Editing a photograph in Photoshop by removing the background and adjusting color levels.
2) Importing the edited photo into InDesign and adding graphic elements like a quote.
3) Creating the second page by importing another photo and adjusting colors, and adding a title at the top of the page.
4) Formatting text from a Word document into columns on the second page to complete the double page spread.
The document describes the process of creating a contents page for a magazine in Photoshop. It involves opening Photoshop and setting the page size, then adding a main image and erasing the background. Additional images are then added and backgrounds erased. Text is overlaid on the images in red and black colors. Page numbers, titles and headings are organized down the side in columns. Feedback is received to add more secondary images, which are incorporated along with effects added. The final contents page includes multiple images, organized text elements, and an editor's letter shape.
The document describes the steps taken to design a magazine cover in Adobe InDesign. These steps include:
1) Creating a silver border and pale blue background rectangle.
2) Inserting a masthead created using Dafont and placing it on the background.
3) Adding a barcode and information box created from an online generator.
4) Adding a tagline above the masthead using alternating colors.
5) Using a bucket list image to create a gradient effect on the masthead.
6) Adjusting and placing the main text block.
The author learned several things from completing the preliminary task to the full music magazine product. They improved the layout so that everything fit properly on the page. The final magazine looked more professional with coverlines and pull quotes. Their IT skills improved as they used more complex features. Researching music increased their knowledge. Comparing the contents pages showed significant improvements in layout, content, and images. Completing the full project helped them better understand magazine conventions and details through research and planning.
The student created a magazine cover in Adobe InDesign and evaluated their work. They found InDesign difficult to use at first but learned several new tools, including the gradient feather tool, eyedropper tool, and rectangle frame tool. While aspects matched the original cover, weaknesses included the background color not matching as well as the featured photo and some text angles not aligning identically. Going forward, the student would make the photo larger and add more depth to the background color.
Week 1 focuses on designing templates for recipe cards, incorporating color, design, and illustrations. Hannah will refine card designs and logos while Lusi writes recipes. The designs will be sent for graphic design and copywriting help.
Week 2 involves editing cards in Photoshop, printing final versions, and laminating them. Printing and laminating would be done by industry professionals.
Week 3 has the team finishing touches on cards, evaluating for strengths and weaknesses with peer feedback, and completing evaluations to further improve the final product if needed.
This document provides a production plan for a magazine called "Chosen Magazine". It outlines key deadlines including a publication date of January 5th 2019 to allow time for printing and distribution by the new year. It discusses the magazine production process including acquiring content by December 25th, sub-editing for quality control, and making editorial and budgeting decisions by December 22nd to meet the bi-weekly deadline. Survey monkey evidence is also presented showing feedback on improving the pitch, front cover, double page spread, and back cover based on more details, clearer text, and using the back cover as an advertisement.
This document outlines the production process and schedule for creating a magazine. It includes sections on deciding content and layout, editing, proofreading, and distributing the magazine. A 5-6 week production plan is provided with tasks scheduled on a weekly basis, including gathering content, artwork, editing, layout, proofreading, and distribution. The goal is to have the magazine completed and distributed by the end of November.
The document outlines a production plan and schedule for creating a music magazine. It involves researching the production process of an inspiration magazine called Kerrang! to understand roles and timeline. The plan includes acquiring content through interviews and photos, laying out pages in Photoshop, adding cover lines and stories, and proofreading before emailing the final file to a printer by February 10th, the planned publication date. Managing the schedule is important to meet deadlines throughout the content acquisition, editing, design, and printing stages of magazine production.
The document outlines a production plan and schedule for creating a music magazine. It involves researching the production process of an inspiration magazine called Kerrang! to understand roles and timeline. The plan includes acquiring content through interviews and photos, laying out pages in Photoshop, adding cover lines and stories, and proofreading before filing the final magazine to the printer by February 10th. Managing the schedule is important to meet deadlines throughout the editorial, design, and production stages.
This document outlines the production process for a magazine. It involves 8 key stages: 1) planning the production schedule, 2) editorial decisions on content and design, 3) acquiring content through writing and photography, 4) sub-editing for accuracy and style, 5) creating the page layout, 6) proofreading, 7) printing, and 8) distribution. Key personnel include the editor, writers, art director, and photo editor. Their various roles in content creation, design, fact-checking, and oversight of the process are also described. Timeframes for different stages vary depending on the magazine but research/writing can take weeks to months while editing may take 3-4 weeks.
This document outlines the production process and schedule for a monthly magazine. It involves:
1) Establishing the monthly production date and creating a schedule.
2) The editorial staff deciding on content, allocating articles/photography, and ensuring budget requirements are met.
3) Writers researching/writing articles and photographers taking photos on deadline.
4) Subediting, layout, proofreading, and sending the final copy to the printer.
5) The printed magazines being distributed to retailers and subscribers.
The entire process takes a month, with the first two weeks focused on planning/content creation and the last two weeks on production.
The document outlines the production process for a magazine, which involves 8 key stages: 1) planning the publishing schedule, 2) making editorial decisions, 3) acquiring content through writing and photography, 4) sub-editing for quality control, 5) creating the page layout, 6) proofreading, 7) printing, and 8) distribution. It also describes the roles of important personnel like the editor, writers, art director, and photo editor. The entire process from initial planning to distribution can take 3-4 months depending on the complexity and length of the magazine.
This production plan outlines the process Claire Olney will follow to produce her own magazine over several weeks in October and November. It involves researching an existing magazine, Q, to understand their production process. Claire's plan then details the steps she will take each week, including researching models, taking photographs, designing draft pages, and developing content like articles and interviews. The final steps will be editing pages, sending the magazine for printing, and distributing copies. The plan aims to have the first issue of Claire's magazine completed by November 8th.
This document outlines a production plan template for a media portfolio project. It details the student's schedule over two weeks for completing tasks such as planning photo shoots, drafting magazine pages, setting templates and styles, editing photos, and completing pages. Key dates are set for completing the front cover, contents page, spreads, templates, and full magazine by November 7th. The plan aims to gather materials, draft designs, take photos, edit images, set up templates and styles, and finish the magazine pages on schedule.
The document outlines the production process for a music magazine from planning to distribution. It is split into various sections including planning, editing, final work, proofreading, and distribution. A schedule is created to help the editorial team plan out the production week and prepare for any issues. The editorial team decides on the magazine contents and budget. Content is acquired through interviews and photoshoots. Sub-editing checks for accuracy and errors. The layout team assembles page prototypes. Proofreading reviews the layout before the final file is sent to the printer. The printed magazines are then distributed to warehouses and stores for public availability.
The document outlines the production process and schedule for a monthly music magazine. It involves researching the process, conducting interviews, taking photos, and creating the front cover, contents page, and a double page spread in Photoshop on a weekly schedule over 6 weeks to meet a release date of January 31st. Key stages of the magazine production process include acquiring content, sub-editing, page layout, proofreading, and printing. The document also discusses choosing a suitable distribution company and setting the release date for the first issue.
The student has created a production plan for their magazine that will be published on December 16th, 2016. Over the coming weeks, they must manage their schedule, research inspiration magazines, make editorial and budget decisions, acquire content from writers, edit submissions, layout the pages, proofread, and send the final file to the printer for mass distribution. Key steps include deciding topics, acquiring articles, editing for quality, designing the layout, more proofreading, filing to print, and distributing the finished magazine.
Thomas Spink is creating a music magazine for his OCR Media Studies coursework. He has researched conventions of music magazines such as using famous artists on the cover for star appeal. His target audience is teens and young adults interested in current music trends. For his preliminary task, Thomas designed a front cover and contents page following the conventions he researched. This included using colors and layouts consistently across pages. He plans to manage his schedule carefully to complete the magazine on time.
The document provides production plans and step-by-step instructions for creating a magazine. It includes a multi-week production schedule laying out tasks and deadlines. It also gives detailed directions for designing the front cover and a double page spread in InDesign, such as selecting colors, inserting images and text, and formatting elements. The goal is to produce a high-quality music magazine on a tight timeline using desktop publishing software and collaboration among a small team.
This document outlines the production process and schedule for a monthly music magazine. It involves researching the existing magazine "We Love Pop" for inspiration. The schedule allows time for potential issues during production to still meet deadlines. Editorial staff decide content and budget before acquiring content through writing, artwork, and research. Sub-editing checks facts, grammar, and page layout. Proofs are read before filing to the printer. The document proposes Innzone for distribution and the 1st of each month for release to readers.
The document provides information across multiple slides related to the production of two magazines - TeensRule and RockStars. It includes witness statements, corrections made to photoshop work, a survey monkey breakdown, production plans, a four week production schedule, calendar events, profit and loss breakdowns, location recces, proposals, photoshoot plans, equipment and staff costs, definitions of royalties and watermarks, and information on data protection acts. The document covers various aspects of planning, designing, and producing the two magazines from initial concepts through financial considerations.
The document describes the steps taken to create a double page magazine spread in Adobe Photoshop and InDesign. Key steps include:
1) Editing a photograph in Photoshop by removing the background and adjusting color levels.
2) Importing the edited photo into InDesign and adding graphic elements like a quote.
3) Creating the second page by importing another photo and adjusting colors, and adding a title at the top of the page.
4) Formatting text from a Word document into columns on the second page to complete the double page spread.
The document describes the process of creating a contents page for a magazine in Photoshop. It involves opening Photoshop and setting the page size, then adding a main image and erasing the background. Additional images are then added and backgrounds erased. Text is overlaid on the images in red and black colors. Page numbers, titles and headings are organized down the side in columns. Feedback is received to add more secondary images, which are incorporated along with effects added. The final contents page includes multiple images, organized text elements, and an editor's letter shape.
The document describes the steps taken to design a magazine cover in Adobe InDesign. These steps include:
1) Creating a silver border and pale blue background rectangle.
2) Inserting a masthead created using Dafont and placing it on the background.
3) Adding a barcode and information box created from an online generator.
4) Adding a tagline above the masthead using alternating colors.
5) Using a bucket list image to create a gradient effect on the masthead.
6) Adjusting and placing the main text block.
The author learned several things from completing the preliminary task to the full music magazine product. They improved the layout so that everything fit properly on the page. The final magazine looked more professional with coverlines and pull quotes. Their IT skills improved as they used more complex features. Researching music increased their knowledge. Comparing the contents pages showed significant improvements in layout, content, and images. Completing the full project helped them better understand magazine conventions and details through research and planning.
The student created a magazine cover in Adobe InDesign and evaluated their work. They found InDesign difficult to use at first but learned several new tools, including the gradient feather tool, eyedropper tool, and rectangle frame tool. While aspects matched the original cover, weaknesses included the background color not matching as well as the featured photo and some text angles not aligning identically. Going forward, the student would make the photo larger and add more depth to the background color.
Week 1 focuses on designing templates for recipe cards, incorporating color, design, and illustrations. Hannah will refine card designs and logos while Lusi writes recipes. The designs will be sent for graphic design and copywriting help.
Week 2 involves editing cards in Photoshop, printing final versions, and laminating them. Printing and laminating would be done by industry professionals.
Week 3 has the team finishing touches on cards, evaluating for strengths and weaknesses with peer feedback, and completing evaluations to further improve the final product if needed.
This document provides a production plan for a magazine called "Chosen Magazine". It outlines key deadlines including a publication date of January 5th 2019 to allow time for printing and distribution by the new year. It discusses the magazine production process including acquiring content by December 25th, sub-editing for quality control, and making editorial and budgeting decisions by December 22nd to meet the bi-weekly deadline. Survey monkey evidence is also presented showing feedback on improving the pitch, front cover, double page spread, and back cover based on more details, clearer text, and using the back cover as an advertisement.
This document outlines the production process and schedule for creating a magazine. It includes sections on deciding content and layout, editing, proofreading, and distributing the magazine. A 5-6 week production plan is provided with tasks scheduled on a weekly basis, including gathering content, artwork, editing, layout, proofreading, and distribution. The goal is to have the magazine completed and distributed by the end of November.
The document outlines a production plan and schedule for creating a music magazine. It involves researching the production process of an inspiration magazine called Kerrang! to understand roles and timeline. The plan includes acquiring content through interviews and photos, laying out pages in Photoshop, adding cover lines and stories, and proofreading before emailing the final file to a printer by February 10th, the planned publication date. Managing the schedule is important to meet deadlines throughout the content acquisition, editing, design, and printing stages of magazine production.
The document outlines a production plan and schedule for creating a music magazine. It involves researching the production process of an inspiration magazine called Kerrang! to understand roles and timeline. The plan includes acquiring content through interviews and photos, laying out pages in Photoshop, adding cover lines and stories, and proofreading before filing the final magazine to the printer by February 10th. Managing the schedule is important to meet deadlines throughout the editorial, design, and production stages.
This document outlines the production process for a magazine. It involves 8 key stages: 1) planning the production schedule, 2) editorial decisions on content and design, 3) acquiring content through writing and photography, 4) sub-editing for accuracy and style, 5) creating the page layout, 6) proofreading, 7) printing, and 8) distribution. Key personnel include the editor, writers, art director, and photo editor. Their various roles in content creation, design, fact-checking, and oversight of the process are also described. Timeframes for different stages vary depending on the magazine but research/writing can take weeks to months while editing may take 3-4 weeks.
This document outlines the production process and schedule for a monthly magazine. It involves:
1) Establishing the monthly production date and creating a schedule.
2) The editorial staff deciding on content, allocating articles/photography, and ensuring budget requirements are met.
3) Writers researching/writing articles and photographers taking photos on deadline.
4) Subediting, layout, proofreading, and sending the final copy to the printer.
5) The printed magazines being distributed to retailers and subscribers.
The entire process takes a month, with the first two weeks focused on planning/content creation and the last two weeks on production.
The document outlines the production process for a magazine, which involves 8 key stages: 1) planning the publishing schedule, 2) making editorial decisions, 3) acquiring content through writing and photography, 4) sub-editing for quality control, 5) creating the page layout, 6) proofreading, 7) printing, and 8) distribution. It also describes the roles of important personnel like the editor, writers, art director, and photo editor. The entire process from initial planning to distribution can take 3-4 months depending on the complexity and length of the magazine.
This production plan outlines the process Claire Olney will follow to produce her own magazine over several weeks in October and November. It involves researching an existing magazine, Q, to understand their production process. Claire's plan then details the steps she will take each week, including researching models, taking photographs, designing draft pages, and developing content like articles and interviews. The final steps will be editing pages, sending the magazine for printing, and distributing copies. The plan aims to have the first issue of Claire's magazine completed by November 8th.
This document outlines a production plan template for a media portfolio project. It details the student's schedule over two weeks for completing tasks such as planning photo shoots, drafting magazine pages, setting templates and styles, editing photos, and completing pages. Key dates are set for completing the front cover, contents page, spreads, templates, and full magazine by November 7th. The plan aims to gather materials, draft designs, take photos, edit images, set up templates and styles, and finish the magazine pages on schedule.
The document outlines the production process for a music magazine from planning to distribution. It is split into various sections including planning, editing, final work, proofreading, and distribution. A schedule is created to help the editorial team plan out the production week and prepare for any issues. The editorial team decides on the magazine contents and budget. Content is acquired through interviews and photoshoots. Sub-editing checks for accuracy and errors. The layout team assembles page prototypes. Proofreading reviews the layout before the final file is sent to the printer. The printed magazines are then distributed to warehouses and stores for public availability.
The document outlines the production process and schedule for a monthly music magazine. It involves researching the process, conducting interviews, taking photos, and creating the front cover, contents page, and a double page spread in Photoshop on a weekly schedule over 6 weeks to meet a release date of January 31st. Key stages of the magazine production process include acquiring content, sub-editing, page layout, proofreading, and printing. The document also discusses choosing a suitable distribution company and setting the release date for the first issue.
The student has created a production plan for their magazine that will be published on December 16th, 2016. Over the coming weeks, they must manage their schedule, research inspiration magazines, make editorial and budget decisions, acquire content from writers, edit submissions, layout the pages, proofread, and send the final file to the printer for mass distribution. Key steps include deciding topics, acquiring articles, editing for quality, designing the layout, more proofreading, filing to print, and distributing the finished magazine.
Thomas Spink is creating a music magazine for his OCR Media Studies coursework. He has researched conventions of music magazines such as using famous artists on the cover for star appeal. His target audience is teens and young adults interested in current music trends. For his preliminary task, Thomas designed a front cover and contents page following the conventions he researched. This included using colors and layouts consistently across pages. He plans to manage his schedule carefully to complete the magazine on time.
The document provides production plans and step-by-step instructions for creating a magazine. It includes a multi-week production schedule laying out tasks and deadlines. It also gives detailed directions for designing the front cover and a double page spread in InDesign, such as selecting colors, inserting images and text, and formatting elements. The goal is to produce a high-quality music magazine on a tight timeline using desktop publishing software and collaboration among a small team.
This document outlines the production process and schedule for a monthly music magazine. It involves researching the existing magazine "We Love Pop" for inspiration. The schedule allows time for potential issues during production to still meet deadlines. Editorial staff decide content and budget before acquiring content through writing, artwork, and research. Sub-editing checks facts, grammar, and page layout. Proofs are read before filing to the printer. The document proposes Innzone for distribution and the 1st of each month for release to readers.
The document outlines the typical production process for a magazine. It involves setting a publication date, managing the schedule, making editorial and budgetary decisions, acquiring content such as articles, artwork, and graphics, sub-editing the content by checking facts, spelling, grammar, and layout, placing advertisements, proofreading, sending the file to the printer, and distributing the printed magazines to retailers for sale. The distributor for the magazine in this case is Frontline, a UK-based company that sells magazines through 55,000 retailers for around £5,000 to distribute on a small scale.
The document outlines Jake Naunton's presentation for pitching a music festival idea. It includes sections on draft poster designs, a mood board analysis, choosing designs, establishing a house style, a photography plan and production schedule. The production schedule is a weekly timeline showing tasks like finalizing designs, promoting on social media, adding content and reviewing the final poster by the end of June. Setting up the festival would require office space, computer systems, software licenses and photography equipment, with total estimated costs presented. Legal considerations for festival posters include adhering to regulations from organizations overseeing media content and advertising standards. Copyright law is also discussed as it applies to attributing original work in magazines and posters.
Mojo magazine is a monthly music magazine published in the UK by Bauer Media with a circulation of 70,667. It focuses on rock music and aims to provide great stories and recommendations for classics and new music. The production process begins with setting a publication date to structure the schedule. An editorial team decides the content which is acquired through staff writers and external contributors. Articles go through sub-editing, page layout, proofreading, and printing before distribution. Kerrang magazine, also published by Bauer Media, similarly aims to reach rock fans through stories and reviews while following the standard magazine production workflow.
This document provides details on planning and producing a new music magazine. It includes a production schedule over 4 weeks with tasks such as finding artists to interview, designing layouts, and distributing the magazine. It also discusses the costs associated with equipment, staff salaries, printing quotes, and marketing. Legal and regulatory considerations for accuracy, privacy, copyright, and data protection are outlined. The target distribution date is Fridays in August to coincide with summer festivals.
Mojo magazine is a monthly music magazine published in the UK by Bauer Media with a circulation of 70,667. It focuses on rock music and has been published for over 20 years. The production process begins with setting a publication date to structure the schedule. An editorial team decides the content which is acquired through staff writers and external contributors. Articles are edited and fact checked before page layout where advertising is placed. Proofs are reviewed and corrections made before printing and distribution to readers.
This document provides an overview of the design and functionality of two proposed social media platforms - GlobalChat and EduChat. It includes descriptions of the login and homepage designs, as well as sections on legal/ethical considerations, privacy, terms of use, budget, and potential revenue streams. The key aspects covered include validation of user age for safety, translation features, advertising space, data protection laws, copyright, and protecting personal user information.
The document outlines plans for an educational social media platform called EduChat. EduChat aims to allow users to communicate like pen pals to learn about different languages and cultures. It will have pages for notifications, finding new connections, messaging, and user profiles. The target audience is adults aged 18-45 who want to meet people abroad and learn languages. A production plan details hiring staff, designing logos, building the website, and testing over 5 weeks. The budget is estimated at £11,700-£32,500. Potential revenue streams include advertisements and a premium membership. Legal issues around data protection and protecting minors must be addressed.
This document provides a production plan for creating a new social media application called GlobalChat or EduChat. It will allow adults to chat globally and learn new languages. The plan involves interviewing employees, deciding on designs, creating graphics, building a website, testing, and launching. The target audience is adults aged 18-45 who want to make international friends and learn languages through natural conversations. The application aims to meet users' needs for language education and friendship through features like translation and individual messaging. It is inspired by pen pals but focuses more on both social interaction and language learning.
The document discusses the purposes, content, target users, revenue sources and legal/ethical issues of Facebook, Instagram, and Snapchat. It notes that Facebook's purpose is to share information and connect people. It generates 98% of its revenue from advertising. Instagram's purpose is for sharing photos/videos and its revenue comes from advertising like sponsored posts. Snapchat's purpose is to send images/videos that delete, and it earns revenue from various types of advertising. The document also outlines some negative effects of social media like increased anxiety and depression, and links between heavy social media use and mental illness.
This document provides details on setting up a publishing company, including pre-production materials, equipment costs, staff costs, and production processes. It includes sections on setting up equipment, pre-production materials like hand drawings, layouts, photography plans and mind maps. Equipment costs are listed totaling over $76,000. Staff costs for roles like publisher, editors, journalists, etc. are provided totaling over $365,000. The production process is outlined with a timeline showing key dates for content acquisition, editing, layout, proofreading, printing and distribution. Overall this document comprehensively outlines the setup and production process for a publishing company.
This document outlines the proposal and planning for a pop music magazine called "Musique". It includes sections on the proposal format, contents, flat plan, rough sketches for the front cover and double page spread, masthead ideas, house style, font styles, images of influence, mood board, a draft article, and graphic layouts for the front cover and double page spread. The magazine will focus on pop music, featuring articles, reviews, and interviews. It will have a biweekly frequency and target 15-35 year old readers. Red and white colors along with sans serif fonts are proposed for the stylistic approach.
The document provides details about the production process of The Sun newspaper. It discusses key stages including setting a publication date and schedule, making editorial and budget decisions, acquiring content through writing and photography, sub-editing for style and accuracy, page layout including advertisements, multiple rounds of proofreading, sending the file to the printer, final proofreading of printer's proofs, large scale printing, and distribution to warehouses for public sale.
This document provides an overview of Q magazine, including its publisher Bauer Media Group. Some key points:
- Q is a monthly UK music magazine first published in 1986 that covers a wide variety of music genres.
- It is owned by Bauer Media Group, the largest magazine publisher in Europe.
- Bauer Media aims to appeal to mainstream audiences with a wide range of magazines, websites, radio stations and more.
- As a music magazine, Q aims to cover popular artists and genres that would appeal to readers aged 20-50, across various social classes and lifestyle.
The document provides details for a pitch presentation advertising a new music festival called Musique Festival. It outlines the target audience as younger people aged 16-26. The goals are to increase ticket sales and awareness of the festival. Key details in the poster will include the title, slogan "The Best Music is at Musique", dates, artists, and venue. Bright, poppy colors will be used to match the feel of the music. The poster will be advertised in magazines and posted around London to promote the festival locally. Feedback on the pitch and posters will be collected through a Survey Monkey.
This document discusses the changes made to a music festival poster, including making the headliners bigger and adding sponsors. Photos taken in Sweden of a sunset skyline were selected to portray a calm, happy festival atmosphere. The poster will be advertised in a magazine for £1,155 in full color. It also discusses legal and ethical considerations around copyright, intellectual property, and regulators like the ASA and Ofcom. A release form for photos is mentioned.
This document provides evidence for a pitch presentation given to clients using Microsoft PowerPoint slides. It includes a witness statement that the pitch presented the appeal of a music festival well. A survey monkey evaluation found that the audience thought the pitch was presented well but could have had more eye contact. Feedback was taken into account to improve the readability of a poster, which was then agreed to be the best proposal.
This document outlines the process for creating a festival poster, including drafting designs, establishing a mood, message, and house style with warm colors. Photo shoots from a Swedish trip will inspire the backdrop. Logos will be simplistic text, and a readable font from dafont.com will be used. Proofs will be read carefully to avoid errors. The poster will advertise in magazines and be printed as posters to place around London where the festival will take place in August during the summer holidays.
The document provides details for planning a poster to advertise a new music festival called "Musique". It includes sections on inspiration, target audience, key messages, design considerations, featured artists, timelines, budgets, and legal/ethical guidelines. The high-level goal is to effectively promote the festival to younger people aged 16-26 to increase ticket sales. Details such as colorful graphics, prominent placement in London, and a multi-pronged advertising campaign are aimed at maximizing awareness and excitement for the upcoming event. Legal protocols will be followed to avoid issues with copyright, intellectual property, and ensuring appropriate representation of artists.
This document discusses the aims, target audience, and advertising methods for the Reading Festival poster and videos. The poster aims to attract a youth audience aged 16-29 by featuring popular artists in bright colors. Videos on Facebook announce the festival's return and headliners to generate excitement. The marketing creates buzz around the festival while complying with advertising regulations.
This document provides an overview of regulatory issues relevant to Q Magazine. It discusses IPSO, the independent press regulator in the UK, and summarizes key aspects of IPSO's Editors' Code of Practice. This includes accurate reporting, privacy, harassment, reporting on children, crime victims, and avoiding discrimination. Financial journalism standards are also summarized.
The proposal outlines a pop music magazine called 'Musique' that will feature popular artists, both established and up-and-coming. It will include images, articles, reviews, and analyses. The target audience is people aged 15-35 of all genders. 'Musique' will be published biweekly on A4 paper with 16 pages, using a red and white color scheme representing the power and perfection of music.
The document provides information about the purpose, form and style, content, meaning, genre, target audience, frequency, and production process of two magazines: Q magazine and Billboard magazine.
Q magazine is a monthly music magazine that aims to inform readers about new music and artists through interviews, photos, and reviews. It uses red and white colors and has no set layout. Billboard magazine is a weekly magazine that tracks and reports music charts, with a focus on the Billboard 100. It uses black and white colors and a logical layout. Both magazines go through typical production processes to publish, including acquiring content, editing, layout, proofreading, and distribution.
Be able to assess locations, risks, and legal/ethical issues relevant to their print media product, finding solutions to any risks or issues identified
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
Beyond Degrees - Empowering the Workforce in the Context of Skills-First.pptxEduSkills OECD
Iván Bornacelly, Policy Analyst at the OECD Centre for Skills, OECD, presents at the webinar 'Tackling job market gaps with a skills-first approach' on 12 June 2024
Elevate Your Nonprofit's Online Presence_ A Guide to Effective SEO Strategies...TechSoup
Whether you're new to SEO or looking to refine your existing strategies, this webinar will provide you with actionable insights and practical tips to elevate your nonprofit's online presence.
This presentation was provided by Rebecca Benner, Ph.D., of the American Society of Anesthesiologists, for the second session of NISO's 2024 Training Series "DEIA in the Scholarly Landscape." Session Two: 'Expanding Pathways to Publishing Careers,' was held June 13, 2024.
How Barcodes Can Be Leveraged Within Odoo 17Celine George
In this presentation, we will explore how barcodes can be leveraged within Odoo 17 to streamline our manufacturing processes. We will cover the configuration steps, how to utilize barcodes in different manufacturing scenarios, and the overall benefits of implementing this technology.
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.
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
Gender and Mental Health - Counselling and Family Therapy Applications and In...PsychoTech Services
A proprietary approach developed by bringing together the best of learning theories from Psychology, design principles from the world of visualization, and pedagogical methods from over a decade of training experience, that enables you to: Learn better, faster!
Gender and Mental Health - Counselling and Family Therapy Applications and In...
Unit 14 LO3
1.
2. Contents
1. LO3
2. Contents
3. Setting Up Equipment
4. Setting Up Equipment
5. Setting Up Equipment
6. Pre-Production Material – Hand
Drawn Drafts
7. Pre-Production Material –
Graphic Layouts
8. Pre-Production Material –
Photography Plan
9. Pre-Production Material – Mind
Map
10. Pre-Production Material – Production Process
11. Pre-Production Material – Production Process
12. Pre-Production Material – Production Plan Table
13. Pre-Production Material – Production Plan Table
14. Operating Desktop Publishing Tools – Step-by-Step Front
Cover
15. Operating Desktop Publishing Tools – Step-by-Step Front
Cover
16. Operating Desktop Publishing Tools – Step-by-Step DPS
17. Operating Desktop Publishing Tools – Step-by-Step Back
Cover
18. Font Style
19. House Style
20. Conclusion
10. Pre-Production Material – Mind Map
Masthead
'Musique' is the name of this magazine. The inspiration behind this name
is similar to Q magazine, instead the Musique stands for music as that is
the main focus of the magazine. The masthead of the magazine will
include the name, the logo and the strapline of the magazine and will
keep to the colour scheme and target audience.
Magazine Ideas
Colour Scheme
Keep the same as Billboard, this is
black and white.
Frequency
'Musique' will be distributed every 2
weeks, this gives the production team
enough time to produce a good quality
magazine with high resolution images.
Target Audience
My target audience will be
people aged between 15 and
35. This is a specific audience
range so the magazine can be
tailored to meet them.
Brand Identity
Must include the logo on the front
cover for it to be able to recognised
by readers.
The logo and layout of Musique
also helps to keep the brand
identity.
Type of Images
The types of images that will be
included in Musique will be all
in full colour of mainly artists.
11. Pre-Production Material – Production Process
• Date of publication: This will be decided on the Saturday 2 weeks before
the publication (22/12/2018), this will be a Saturday and means that
members of the public can enjoy the magazine over their weekend.
• Managing the schedule: The deadline of every 2 weeks on a Saturday must
be met, this will only happen if everyone involved works together, this
means the plan must be completed on 22/12/2018.
• Editorial and budgeting decisions: These should be kept similar from
fortnight to fortnight but will have to be officially decided and made known
on 22/12/2018.
• Content acquisition: this is where the content will be gathered and will
have to be completed by 25/12/2018, in order for the editors to edit and
create the magazine.
https://hosbeg.com/the-magazine-production-process/
12. • Sub-editing: this is the quality control of the magazine content and can be done
by the editor, this should be done as the content is acquired to be most efficient.
This should be completed by 29/12/2018.
• Page layout: this is done to make it easy to read the magazine, advertisements
are placed in this stage, and should be finished by the 30/12/2018.
• Proofreading: this is printing of one hard copy to read and correct all mistakes,
this is to be completed by 01/01/2019.
• File emailed to printer: the entire magazine is sent and printed by the company
and should be completed by the 03/01/2019.
• Distribution: this is the sending of the magazine to stores and warehouses, this
needs to be delivered by 05/01/2019 to ensure the readers get their magazine on
time.
https://hosbeg.com/the-magazine-production-process/
Pre-Production Material – Production Process
13. Production Plan Table
Saturday
22/12/2018
Sunday
23/12/2018
Monday
24/12/2018
Tuesday
25/12/2018
Wednesday
26/12/2018
Thursday
27/12/2018
Friday
28/12/2018
The date of
publication will be
decided and will
then allow the
teams to act
accordingly to the
timeframe they
have been given.
Day-off to
brainstorm
Day-off to
brainstorm
The final decision of
content and artists
that will be included
is made.
The teams then
delegate what to do
over the next
fortnight.
The journalists and
photographers work
together to arrange a
photo-shoot and
interview with each
featured artist and
complete this.
Graphic designers
and editors work
together to design
the page layouts.
The marketers start
to find and collect
advertisements for
the pages.
The finance staff will
decide on the final
amount
The writers start to
write the full article
for each artist.
This continues.
The marketers now
will communicate
with the printers and
the distributors to
ensure the magazine
will be distributed by
the publication date
agreed.
Complete:
22/12/2018
Complete:
25/12/2018
Complete:
25/12/2018
Complete:
By 25/12/2018
Complete:
28/12/2018
Complete:
29/12/2018
Complete:
30/12/2018
14. Production Plan Table
Saturday
29/12/2018
Sunday
30/12/2018
Monday
31/12/2018
Tuesday
01/01/2019
Wednesday
02/01/2019
Thursday
03/01/2019
Friday
04/01/2019
Editors proof read
the magazine.
Graphic designers
complete the
magazine and
page layout.
Copy of the
magazine gets
sent to the
printers at the end
of the day.
Day-off Day-off Printed copy should
return, final proof
read.
Returned final copy
to the printers. Then
the printing company
will take over and
print the total
amount of copies.
The printers hand
over the copies to the
magazine, where they
give the copies to the
distributing company.
The distributing
company takes over
and gives the copies
to selected retailers
and, for any
subscribers, to their
house.
Complete:
01/01/2019
Complete:
N/A
Complete:
N/A
Complete:
02/01/2019
Complete:
03/01/2019
Complete:
04/01/2019
Complete:
05/01/2019
15. Operating Desktop Publishing Tools
Step-by-Step Guide: Front Covers
Open Photoshop, use international paper template, must set the background to
white in order to edit it later, cmd = R brings up the rulers, click and drag from the
ruler edge to make guidelines to set up the page and have bleed lines.
Insert the image from my user area, remove the “green screen” background by
clicking on the heading ‘select’ and clicking on colour range, then selecting the
green parts of the image, then clicking OK. This removes the green parts of the
image.
The masthead was created with a font downloaded from dafont.com. This was
placed rotated 90º on the right hand side of the magazine cover. Some of this
covered the main image.
The background was created by inserting a .png image of palm trees over the white
reducing the opacity and creating a gradient over the top from red through orange
to turquoise.
16. Operating Desktop Publishing Tools
Step-by-Step Guide: Front Covers
The cover lines were created through the use of the text tool, here there is the
option to edit the font through the character tab. This can change the height, width
and style. Through holding alt and dragging the text away, I created a duplicate of
that text, this ensured that the text is the same throughout the cover.
To make the puff promotion I used the eclipse tool and held shift as I dragged
outwards this kept the perfect circular shape. I used the fill bucket to make the
circle red. I placed this in the bottom right hand corner to keep similar to the red
gradient at the top. I added the text the same way as the cover lines. The text was
aligned central.
The barcode was added through a .png image of a barcode, I added the date and
issue the same was as the cover lines. The social media logos were .png’s found on
the internet, I used the fill bucket to change the colour of the blue for Facebook
and yellow for Snapchat to make this red, keeping in the similar as the puff
promotion. The Instagram logo was made red through a colour overlay.
17. Operating Desktop Publishing Tools
Step-by-Step Guide: DPS
Open Photoshop, use international paper template, change the width to 420
pixels, must set the background to white in order to edit it later, cmd = R
brings up the rulers, click and drag from the ruler edge to make guidelines to
set up the pages and have bleed lines.
Insert the image from my user area, remove the “green screen” background
by clicking on the heading ‘select’ and clicking on colour range, then
selecting the green parts of the image, then clicking OK. This removes the
green parts of the image.
The background was created with a gradient from pink to red and purple to
blue.
The text was added with the text tool and this was edited to show the
difference in who was speaking, to establish the stand first and the pull
quote, and page numbers.
18. Operating Desktop Publishing Tools
Step-by-Step Guide: Back Covers
Open Photoshop, use international paper template, must set the
background to white in order to edit it later, cmd = R brings up the
rulers, click and drag from the ruler edge to make guidelines to set up
the page and have bleed lines.
The background was created by inserting a .png image of palm trees
over the white reducing the opacity and creating a gradient over the
top from red through orange to turquoise.
I added the quote from Selena Gomez using the text tool, through
holding alt and dragging the text away, I created a duplicate of that
text, this ensured that the text is the same throughout the cover.
19. Font Style
I will get the magazine’s fonts from www.dafont.com because the
website allows fonts to be downloaded and used.
The font I will use is ‘Couture Bold’. This is because it looks similar to
my inspiration magazine and is clear to see what the magazine is called.
This allows for easy reading of the name and masthead.
20. House Style
This will be similar to Billboard, keeping the masthead and cover lines black
and white and including colours in the background to highlight the image
further.
The black and white shows the simplicity and sophistication levels of the
magazine. This is because black and white together connote a sense of pure
strength. This will relate to the power ‘Musique’ will have in the music
magazine industry.
The other colours will be bright to show and highlight the importance of
each feature of the magazine. This could be a colourful image, to show that
this image will be important and relate to the text surrounding it.
There will be the social media icons on the magazine front covers, this will be
to show that the magazine has a social media presence, this will be coloured
to keep in theme with the colour scheme
21. Conclusion
I have created an original print based media product. This magazine is
of a high quality and I have used multiple materials to plan and
produce this magazine. The tools I have used, have been highly
beneficial to producing this magazine and I used them all to the best
that they can be used.