This document outlines the content and design plans for a print-based media product focused on hip hop and rap music. It includes rough sketches of masthead, cover story, and page layout ideas. Final sketches are presented that showcase the chosen front cover and double page spread designs. Details are provided about the intended house style, including color scheme, fonts, and planned social media presence. Influential images of rappers are displayed to inspire the magazine's visual style.
This document summarizes information about several music magazines, including their publishers, circulation numbers, target readers, and content focuses. Classic Rock targets 35+ affluent men and covers rock news and interviews. Metal Hammer covers metal and punk genres for a young male audience. NME also targets young men and covers various genres like metal and punk. Q guides readers through new music and has a median reader age of 29. Kerrang! focuses on rock genres weekly for a readership with a median age of 22. Mojo delivers journalism and photography monthly for a readership with a median age of 37.
This document summarizes information about several music magazines, including their publishers, circulation numbers, target readers, and content focuses. Classic Rock targets 35+ affluent men and covers rock news and interviews. Metal Hammer covers metal and punk genres for young men. NME also targets young men and covers various genres. Q guides readers through new music. Kerrang! focuses on rock music and new bands. Mojo delivers journalism and photography about music for readers aged 37.
This document contains a portfolio submitted by Amelia Morris for a candidate number of 4150. The portfolio outlines the development of a magazine concept called "Beats!" focused on indie/rock music. It includes sections on generating ideas, mood boards for inspiration, font and color ideas, a production plan, location research, advertising strategies, analysis of existing magazines, survey research results, questionnaires, a magazine layout plan, and target readership analysis. The document provides details on the planning and research conducted to design an independent music magazine targeted towards younger males and females interested in indie/rock music genres.
This document outlines the process of creating a music magazine called "Foul" from start to finish. It includes researching existing magazines, conducting an audience survey, and planning various elements like the front cover, contents page, and feature articles. Rough hand-drawn plans were made for the front cover, contents page, and double page spreads before creating the magazine in Adobe Photoshop based on conventions from other publications but tailored to the target drum-n-bass/dance audience.
This magazine chose to interview the band The Last Shadow Puppets as their music fits the genre the magazine focuses on. The informal, comical article discusses funny moments the band members experienced outside of recording. It uses a two-column layout with a full-width background image. The target audience is adults interested in the band's music genre.
This document provides information on several music magazines, including their target readers, circulation numbers, and content focus. Classic Rock targets affluent 35+ men and covers rock news and interviews. Metal Hammer covers metal, punk, and the British music scene for a young male audience. Q guides readers through new music and has a readership of 550,000 aged 29. Kerrang! focuses on rock genres weekly for readers aged 22. Mojo delivers journalism and photography monthly for readers aged 37.
This document provides information on several music magazines, including their target readers, circulation numbers, and content focus. Classic Rock targets affluent 35+ men and covers rock news and interviews. Metal Hammer covers metal, punk, and the British music scene for a young male audience. Q guides readers through new music and has a readership of 550,000 aged 29. Kerrang! focuses on rock genres weekly for readers aged 22. Mojo delivers journalism and photography monthly for readers aged 37.
The document analyzes the front covers of three music magazines - NME, Kerrang, and NME again. It examines elements like the masthead, images, headlines, quotes, and backgrounds used on the covers. The analyses suggest these elements are designed to attract the magazines' target audiences, which are typically male readers aged 14-30 interested in genres like indie/rock/hip hop. Key details about artists and articles are highlighted to draw readers in and encourage them to learn more by purchasing the issue.
This document summarizes information about several music magazines, including their publishers, circulation numbers, target readers, and content focuses. Classic Rock targets 35+ affluent men and covers rock news and interviews. Metal Hammer covers metal and punk genres for a young male audience. NME also targets young men and covers various genres like metal and punk. Q guides readers through new music and has a median reader age of 29. Kerrang! focuses on rock genres weekly for a readership with a median age of 22. Mojo delivers journalism and photography monthly for a readership with a median age of 37.
This document summarizes information about several music magazines, including their publishers, circulation numbers, target readers, and content focuses. Classic Rock targets 35+ affluent men and covers rock news and interviews. Metal Hammer covers metal and punk genres for young men. NME also targets young men and covers various genres. Q guides readers through new music. Kerrang! focuses on rock music and new bands. Mojo delivers journalism and photography about music for readers aged 37.
This document contains a portfolio submitted by Amelia Morris for a candidate number of 4150. The portfolio outlines the development of a magazine concept called "Beats!" focused on indie/rock music. It includes sections on generating ideas, mood boards for inspiration, font and color ideas, a production plan, location research, advertising strategies, analysis of existing magazines, survey research results, questionnaires, a magazine layout plan, and target readership analysis. The document provides details on the planning and research conducted to design an independent music magazine targeted towards younger males and females interested in indie/rock music genres.
This document outlines the process of creating a music magazine called "Foul" from start to finish. It includes researching existing magazines, conducting an audience survey, and planning various elements like the front cover, contents page, and feature articles. Rough hand-drawn plans were made for the front cover, contents page, and double page spreads before creating the magazine in Adobe Photoshop based on conventions from other publications but tailored to the target drum-n-bass/dance audience.
This magazine chose to interview the band The Last Shadow Puppets as their music fits the genre the magazine focuses on. The informal, comical article discusses funny moments the band members experienced outside of recording. It uses a two-column layout with a full-width background image. The target audience is adults interested in the band's music genre.
This document provides information on several music magazines, including their target readers, circulation numbers, and content focus. Classic Rock targets affluent 35+ men and covers rock news and interviews. Metal Hammer covers metal, punk, and the British music scene for a young male audience. Q guides readers through new music and has a readership of 550,000 aged 29. Kerrang! focuses on rock genres weekly for readers aged 22. Mojo delivers journalism and photography monthly for readers aged 37.
This document provides information on several music magazines, including their target readers, circulation numbers, and content focus. Classic Rock targets affluent 35+ men and covers rock news and interviews. Metal Hammer covers metal, punk, and the British music scene for a young male audience. Q guides readers through new music and has a readership of 550,000 aged 29. Kerrang! focuses on rock genres weekly for readers aged 22. Mojo delivers journalism and photography monthly for readers aged 37.
The document analyzes the front covers of three music magazines - NME, Kerrang, and NME again. It examines elements like the masthead, images, headlines, quotes, and backgrounds used on the covers. The analyses suggest these elements are designed to attract the magazines' target audiences, which are typically male readers aged 14-30 interested in genres like indie/rock/hip hop. Key details about artists and articles are highlighted to draw readers in and encourage them to learn more by purchasing the issue.
The document provides details about creating a magazine focused on folk music. It discusses researching the target audience and genre, evaluating similar magazines for elements to include, designing a cover and contents page, and conducting a photo shoot. Market research found an opportunity for a magazine in the folk genre as it has grown in popularity among youth. Elements were taken from the magazines Q and NME to design the cover and contents page for the new folk magazine.
The document provides 3 potential narrative frameworks for a music magazine focused on an upcoming hip hop or urban artist.
Idea 1 features the artist prominently on the front cover with a brick wall background. The contents page would include the artist image and fact file. A double page spread would include a Q&A interview with the artist.
Idea 2 keeps the original background in images. The contents page includes the artist image and fact file alongside contents. A double page uses a long shot of the artist alongside an article.
Idea 3 places the artist centrally on the front cover with an edited background. The contents page lists contents vertically with preview images. A double page positions the artist alongside a fact file
The document discusses the design elements of a music magazine product. It summarizes the use of design conventions including:
- A masthead titled "lyric culture" in a typewriter font representing the indie/rock genre.
- A color scheme of red, black, and white representing rebellion and edginess throughout the magazine.
- Photography following rules of thirds and manipulation through brightness/contrast to portray artists as edgy and rebellious.
- A contents page organized into sections and using bold text to highlight important stories.
- A double page artist interview spread separated into sections for an organized yet contrasting sophisticated and rebellious design.
The double page spread features an interview with two artists who have formed a new band. A large main image shows the two artists in a sophisticated setting. The text of the interview is informal and humorous in tone, using colloquial language to discuss how the artists met and the new band's formation. Pull quotes and a variety of fonts are used throughout to represent the rock genre and make the interview engaging for readers.
BEATS is a proposed music magazine with a focus on indie and rock music. It will have a print magazine as well as online and mobile presences. The magazine will be 283mm by 225mm in size, similar to NME. BEATS aims to bring people together through music news and discovery, while ensuring all content is truthful and avoids offending individuals. The price of a single print issue of BEATS will be £2.50, matching the price of competitor magazines like NME.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. It's helpful to understand what draws audiences to
superhero films and promotional materials. Bright colors, recognizable characters and catchy
phrases seem most effective at grabbing attention based on your feedback. I'll keep these insights
in mind as I design promotional content for my superhero film concept.
This document appears to be a portfolio or project containing details for the design of two music magazines called "Lyrical" and "A". It includes sections on the magazine concepts, target audiences, inspiration magazines, font styles explored, and graphic layout designs for the front covers and double page spreads. Draft designs are presented and conclusions made on the chosen layouts for each magazine. The document contains extensive details on the visual design exploration and decisions.
The document provides details on the development of two magazine concepts - "Lyrical" and "A". It includes mind maps, mood boards, font style options, and proposed graphic layouts for the front covers and double page spreads. For each magazine, the target audience, genre, pricing, and design elements like mastheads, colors and images are described. Feedback is provided on the chosen layouts and why they are more appealing for catching the reader's eye and attention. In conclusion, the two magazines were selected over a third option called "Melody" as they appeal to wider audiences within the pop and pop-rock genres.
The document provides guidelines for a double page spread for a music magazine project. It outlines the following layout:
1) The left page will feature a large primary image taking up 3/4 of the page with the headline above it.
2) The right page will have two columns of text for an article interviewing an up-and-coming hip hop artist.
3) Images, font, and color scheme will be consistent with the magazine's brand identity and represent the hip hop genre.
4) The interview will use informal language and stylistic elements to mimic a natural conversation.
The document provides details on the layout, design, and stylistic elements of various rock and metal music magazine covers and pages. It describes the use of bold colors, fonts, and imagery to draw attention to artist names and content previews while maintaining a simple and eye-catching presentation. Photographs typically show artists in posed shots, live performances, or casual settings rather than formal photo shoots.
This document analyzes and compares the layout features of double page spreads from three magazines: MOJO, Vibe, and Reggae Report. It finds that all three provide multiple entrance points for readers to engage with content. Two magazines employ the "rule of thirds" for layout, while MOJO does not. Anchorage of images with captions is important across magazines. Bylines informing the author and photographer are used in Reggae Report. Stand first paragraphs summarizing the full article are used in MOJO and Vibe but not Reggae Report. Common layout elements like drop caps, placement of images and text, and color schemes are also examined.
This document analyzes the contents page and double page spread (DPS) of a music magazine.
The contents page uses bold page numbers and headings to help readers quickly find topics of interest. It also lists band indexes to showcase which bands are featured. The DPS focuses on an interview with the band Kasabian, using a large central image of the band along with a bold title spanning two pages. Design elements like drop caps, pull quotes, and standfirst text are intended to draw readers into the article. Color schemes and language aim to present information in an engaging yet serious manner for the target audience.
This document analyzes the conventions used in the contents page and double page spread (DPS) of a music magazine. For the contents page, it discusses the structured layout with listings and a main story/image, use of house colors and fonts for unity, and including an image with star appeal. For the DPS, it notes conventions like a large background image, article text in columns, and placement of the page number and writer's name. The document concludes by outlining features the author intends to repeat in their own magazine pages, such as comprehensive layout, emphasis with fonts/colors, and use of high quality images.
LO1 – Be able to produce pre-production materials for a planned original prin...mdelmar97
Megan del Mar has created pre-production materials for a music magazine, including rough sketches, masthead ideas, font styles, flat plans, draft articles, graphic layouts, and production plans. The pre-production materials focus on annotation of design elements and their intended meanings, such as using a 3D masthead font to emulate other successful magazines. Photography plans and equipment needs are also outlined. The conclusion emphasizes that the pre-production process focused on thorough planning and explanation of design choices to prevent errors and save time in the production stage.
The survey gathered responses from 23 people to help inform the development of a new rock music magazine focused on the North of England. Most respondents were younger, between 17-24 years old, and male, reflecting the typical demographics of rock music fans. The survey asked questions about where people get their music information, what magazines they currently engage with, preferred social media and magazine content, topics for artist interviews, and types of advertisements. The responses will help ensure the new magazine appeals to a wide range of ages and includes content relevant to both female and male fans.
The document analyzes and summarizes various magazine contents pages and features from different genres of music magazines including alternative, classical, hip-hop, and indie magazines. Key elements like mastheads, images, headlines, and layouts are discussed in relation to how they appeal to different target audiences for each magazine genre. Common conventions for different genres are also identified such as more text-heavy features in indie magazines and street-style photos appealing to hip-hop audiences.
Nathan Paul Edser has submitted a foundation portfolio for a media course. The portfolio includes a preliminary exercise to design the front cover and contents page of a new school/college magazine. Nathan analyzed conventions for magazine covers such as including the masthead, central image, and plugs. He also examined conventions for contents pages like subheadings, previews, and contact information. Nathan designed mockups for the front cover of "Sponne Weekly" featuring a photo of Bruno Mars and for the contents page laying out article topics and page numbers. He discussed representations in the central image and choices of fonts, layouts, and color schemes.
This document contains planning information for a magazine photoshoot, including:
- A location recce plan outlining the types of shots needed, locations, and equipment.
- A prop list table showing the equipment needed, prices, suppliers, and total cost.
- Notes on improving the initial production plan.
This document outlines a photo shoot plan for a print media project. It details that the photographer will be taking medium close-ups and long shots of an artist to portray their identity and personality. Reference images show a front cover featuring legends of music to make audiences feel nostalgic. Medium close-ups will illustrate the artist's facial expressions and body language, while long shots will reveal more of their body language and location. The model chosen looks like the featured artist and dresses similarly in casual clothes like plain shirts, jeans, and shoes. Hair will be casual with no makeup. Photos will take place at school with the background replaced to better suit the magazine's purpose.
Unit 13 – LO2 Planning and Pitching a Print Based Media Product stamkostas3068
This document outlines ideas for two rap/hip-hop magazines called "NXT EP" and "313." For "NXT EP," the magazine would focus on the latest news and up-and-coming artists, reflected in its name. It would use red, black, and white colors and target 16-30 year olds. "313" would focus more on throwback stories and original rap music, represented by Detroit's area code. Both magazines would be monthly, cost £3.99, and use A4 size to fit more content. Moodboards provide visual inspiration, depicting iconic rappers for "313" and current popular artists for "NXT EP." The target audience and content are designed to attract
This document provides details for developing two magazine concepts - "NXT EP" and "313".
For "NXT EP", the magazine would focus on featuring big name artists and up-and-coming artists, with an emphasis on new releases. The masthead "SHD" represents shade or unfair criticism in rap music.
For "313", the magazine would focus on past rap artists from Detroit as well as throwback stories. The masthead number "313" represents Detroit's area code, highlighting the magazine's focus on origins of raw rap talent. Both magazines would be released monthly to keep readers updated on new music and stories in the rap/hip-hop genre.
The document provides details about creating a magazine focused on folk music. It discusses researching the target audience and genre, evaluating similar magazines for elements to include, designing a cover and contents page, and conducting a photo shoot. Market research found an opportunity for a magazine in the folk genre as it has grown in popularity among youth. Elements were taken from the magazines Q and NME to design the cover and contents page for the new folk magazine.
The document provides 3 potential narrative frameworks for a music magazine focused on an upcoming hip hop or urban artist.
Idea 1 features the artist prominently on the front cover with a brick wall background. The contents page would include the artist image and fact file. A double page spread would include a Q&A interview with the artist.
Idea 2 keeps the original background in images. The contents page includes the artist image and fact file alongside contents. A double page uses a long shot of the artist alongside an article.
Idea 3 places the artist centrally on the front cover with an edited background. The contents page lists contents vertically with preview images. A double page positions the artist alongside a fact file
The document discusses the design elements of a music magazine product. It summarizes the use of design conventions including:
- A masthead titled "lyric culture" in a typewriter font representing the indie/rock genre.
- A color scheme of red, black, and white representing rebellion and edginess throughout the magazine.
- Photography following rules of thirds and manipulation through brightness/contrast to portray artists as edgy and rebellious.
- A contents page organized into sections and using bold text to highlight important stories.
- A double page artist interview spread separated into sections for an organized yet contrasting sophisticated and rebellious design.
The double page spread features an interview with two artists who have formed a new band. A large main image shows the two artists in a sophisticated setting. The text of the interview is informal and humorous in tone, using colloquial language to discuss how the artists met and the new band's formation. Pull quotes and a variety of fonts are used throughout to represent the rock genre and make the interview engaging for readers.
BEATS is a proposed music magazine with a focus on indie and rock music. It will have a print magazine as well as online and mobile presences. The magazine will be 283mm by 225mm in size, similar to NME. BEATS aims to bring people together through music news and discovery, while ensuring all content is truthful and avoids offending individuals. The price of a single print issue of BEATS will be £2.50, matching the price of competitor magazines like NME.
Thank you for sharing your thoughts. It's helpful to understand what draws audiences to
superhero films and promotional materials. Bright colors, recognizable characters and catchy
phrases seem most effective at grabbing attention based on your feedback. I'll keep these insights
in mind as I design promotional content for my superhero film concept.
This document appears to be a portfolio or project containing details for the design of two music magazines called "Lyrical" and "A". It includes sections on the magazine concepts, target audiences, inspiration magazines, font styles explored, and graphic layout designs for the front covers and double page spreads. Draft designs are presented and conclusions made on the chosen layouts for each magazine. The document contains extensive details on the visual design exploration and decisions.
The document provides details on the development of two magazine concepts - "Lyrical" and "A". It includes mind maps, mood boards, font style options, and proposed graphic layouts for the front covers and double page spreads. For each magazine, the target audience, genre, pricing, and design elements like mastheads, colors and images are described. Feedback is provided on the chosen layouts and why they are more appealing for catching the reader's eye and attention. In conclusion, the two magazines were selected over a third option called "Melody" as they appeal to wider audiences within the pop and pop-rock genres.
The document provides guidelines for a double page spread for a music magazine project. It outlines the following layout:
1) The left page will feature a large primary image taking up 3/4 of the page with the headline above it.
2) The right page will have two columns of text for an article interviewing an up-and-coming hip hop artist.
3) Images, font, and color scheme will be consistent with the magazine's brand identity and represent the hip hop genre.
4) The interview will use informal language and stylistic elements to mimic a natural conversation.
The document provides details on the layout, design, and stylistic elements of various rock and metal music magazine covers and pages. It describes the use of bold colors, fonts, and imagery to draw attention to artist names and content previews while maintaining a simple and eye-catching presentation. Photographs typically show artists in posed shots, live performances, or casual settings rather than formal photo shoots.
This document analyzes and compares the layout features of double page spreads from three magazines: MOJO, Vibe, and Reggae Report. It finds that all three provide multiple entrance points for readers to engage with content. Two magazines employ the "rule of thirds" for layout, while MOJO does not. Anchorage of images with captions is important across magazines. Bylines informing the author and photographer are used in Reggae Report. Stand first paragraphs summarizing the full article are used in MOJO and Vibe but not Reggae Report. Common layout elements like drop caps, placement of images and text, and color schemes are also examined.
This document analyzes the contents page and double page spread (DPS) of a music magazine.
The contents page uses bold page numbers and headings to help readers quickly find topics of interest. It also lists band indexes to showcase which bands are featured. The DPS focuses on an interview with the band Kasabian, using a large central image of the band along with a bold title spanning two pages. Design elements like drop caps, pull quotes, and standfirst text are intended to draw readers into the article. Color schemes and language aim to present information in an engaging yet serious manner for the target audience.
This document analyzes the conventions used in the contents page and double page spread (DPS) of a music magazine. For the contents page, it discusses the structured layout with listings and a main story/image, use of house colors and fonts for unity, and including an image with star appeal. For the DPS, it notes conventions like a large background image, article text in columns, and placement of the page number and writer's name. The document concludes by outlining features the author intends to repeat in their own magazine pages, such as comprehensive layout, emphasis with fonts/colors, and use of high quality images.
LO1 – Be able to produce pre-production materials for a planned original prin...mdelmar97
Megan del Mar has created pre-production materials for a music magazine, including rough sketches, masthead ideas, font styles, flat plans, draft articles, graphic layouts, and production plans. The pre-production materials focus on annotation of design elements and their intended meanings, such as using a 3D masthead font to emulate other successful magazines. Photography plans and equipment needs are also outlined. The conclusion emphasizes that the pre-production process focused on thorough planning and explanation of design choices to prevent errors and save time in the production stage.
The survey gathered responses from 23 people to help inform the development of a new rock music magazine focused on the North of England. Most respondents were younger, between 17-24 years old, and male, reflecting the typical demographics of rock music fans. The survey asked questions about where people get their music information, what magazines they currently engage with, preferred social media and magazine content, topics for artist interviews, and types of advertisements. The responses will help ensure the new magazine appeals to a wide range of ages and includes content relevant to both female and male fans.
The document analyzes and summarizes various magazine contents pages and features from different genres of music magazines including alternative, classical, hip-hop, and indie magazines. Key elements like mastheads, images, headlines, and layouts are discussed in relation to how they appeal to different target audiences for each magazine genre. Common conventions for different genres are also identified such as more text-heavy features in indie magazines and street-style photos appealing to hip-hop audiences.
Nathan Paul Edser has submitted a foundation portfolio for a media course. The portfolio includes a preliminary exercise to design the front cover and contents page of a new school/college magazine. Nathan analyzed conventions for magazine covers such as including the masthead, central image, and plugs. He also examined conventions for contents pages like subheadings, previews, and contact information. Nathan designed mockups for the front cover of "Sponne Weekly" featuring a photo of Bruno Mars and for the contents page laying out article topics and page numbers. He discussed representations in the central image and choices of fonts, layouts, and color schemes.
This document contains planning information for a magazine photoshoot, including:
- A location recce plan outlining the types of shots needed, locations, and equipment.
- A prop list table showing the equipment needed, prices, suppliers, and total cost.
- Notes on improving the initial production plan.
This document outlines a photo shoot plan for a print media project. It details that the photographer will be taking medium close-ups and long shots of an artist to portray their identity and personality. Reference images show a front cover featuring legends of music to make audiences feel nostalgic. Medium close-ups will illustrate the artist's facial expressions and body language, while long shots will reveal more of their body language and location. The model chosen looks like the featured artist and dresses similarly in casual clothes like plain shirts, jeans, and shoes. Hair will be casual with no makeup. Photos will take place at school with the background replaced to better suit the magazine's purpose.
Unit 13 – LO2 Planning and Pitching a Print Based Media Product stamkostas3068
This document outlines ideas for two rap/hip-hop magazines called "NXT EP" and "313." For "NXT EP," the magazine would focus on the latest news and up-and-coming artists, reflected in its name. It would use red, black, and white colors and target 16-30 year olds. "313" would focus more on throwback stories and original rap music, represented by Detroit's area code. Both magazines would be monthly, cost £3.99, and use A4 size to fit more content. Moodboards provide visual inspiration, depicting iconic rappers for "313" and current popular artists for "NXT EP." The target audience and content are designed to attract
This document provides details for developing two magazine concepts - "NXT EP" and "313".
For "NXT EP", the magazine would focus on featuring big name artists and up-and-coming artists, with an emphasis on new releases. The masthead "SHD" represents shade or unfair criticism in rap music.
For "313", the magazine would focus on past rap artists from Detroit as well as throwback stories. The masthead number "313" represents Detroit's area code, highlighting the magazine's focus on origins of raw rap talent. Both magazines would be released monthly to keep readers updated on new music and stories in the rap/hip-hop genre.
Thomas McEnaney submitted proposals and designs for a music magazine called SHUTTERS as part of his Level 3 Cambridge Introductory Diploma in Media course at St. Andrew's Catholic School. The document includes draft front covers, a double page spread layout, and explanations of design choices such as the font, layout, cover lines, and interview format. The main focus of the double page spread would be an interview with the band The Killers about their history and future plans.
The document discusses initial ideas for a rap music magazine called "Rebel". The target audience would be 18-year-old American male Cameron, who likes hanging out with friends on weekends clubbing and drinking. The front cover would feature a medium close-up image of a rap artist in stereotypical clothing with the masthead in the top left. Bold colors like red, black, and yellow would be used. The contents page would use red and black with two images and borders, listing regular and featured articles. A double page spread would show a longshot of an artist occupying one third of the page to allow for article text. Photographs would use dark backgrounds and locations like alleys.
Thomas McEnaney submitted a media project for his Level 3 Cambridge Introductory Diploma in Media. He proposed creating a monthly music magazine called SHUTTERS focused on new and upcoming British bands. The magazine would be £1.50 per issue and distributed monthly. It would include band interviews, news, and free posters. McEnaney provided details on the magazine's design, including the logo, fonts, colors, and layout. He also outlined plans for photography, equipment needs, and the first issue featuring an interview with The Killers.
The document outlines the production process for a print-based magazine, including rough sketches of layout elements, finalizing graphic designs, conducting a photo shoot, drafting articles and interviews, and developing a production plan to finalize and distribute the first issue. Key elements that are planned include determining staff roles, selecting an artist for the cover, conducting an interview, and designing the layout in software like Photoshop and InDesign. The production plan schedules tasks over multiple weeks to interview staff, find an artist, conduct a photo shoot, write and edit articles, and finalize the design and distribution of the magazine.
1. The document discusses the process of creating a mock music magazine following conventions of the genre. Research was conducted on existing magazines to understand conventions around cover design, features, and content.
2. A focus group provided feedback that influenced design changes, such as using a bold black background instead of purple. Photoshop skills were developed to design the magazine layout and images.
3. The final magazine design featured a model posing as a rapper on the cover, bold typography, and an interview feature spread - all following conventions identified from research into magazines like XXL and Vibe.
Music Magazine – Initial Ideas and Project ProposalJackMungeMedia
This document outlines initial ideas for a music magazine, including genres like metal, rock, and drum and bass. The target audience is teenagers and young adults interested in those genres. Possible magazine titles and artist names are listed. The front cover may feature a medium shot of an artist. Inside content could include interviews, reviews of new releases, and articles on trending topics. Color schemes and fonts are discussed to appeal to readers. A double page spread would showcase the most popular songs of the week from reader polls.
Thomas McEnaney submitted a portfolio for the Level 3 Cambridge Introductory Diploma in Media unit on UK Media Publishing. The portfolio included mood boards, mind maps, draft interviews, masthead designs, and graphic layouts for the magazine's front cover, double page spread, and "Off the Radar" section. Analysis explained the design choices like using the house style colors and layouts inspired by established magazines. A magazine flat plan outlined the planned content sections.
The document outlines plans for two hip-hop magazines called "President" and "STATE". Key details include:
- The magazines will have a monthly release schedule and target an audience aged 16-35.
- "President" will use a blue and white color scheme while "STATE" will use red and black. Both magazines will be priced at £3.
- Front covers will feature prominent images of famous hip-hop artists and cover lines to attract readers.
- Inside pages will have large headlines and quotes from artists to tell their stories. A consistent masthead and layout will build brand recognition.
The document outlines plans for two hip hop magazines called "President" and "STATE". Key details include:
- The magazines will have a monthly release schedule and target an audience of 16-35 year olds.
- "President" will use a blue and white color scheme while "STATE" will use red and black. Both will be priced at £3.
- The front covers will feature images of famous hip hop artists and quotes to attract readers.
- Inside pages will have large headlines and photos along with interviews and articles.
- Hand drawn drafts of sample front and inside pages were created to plan out the magazine designs.
The document provides details on the layout and design choices for two magazine covers - a front cover and a double page spread.
For the front cover, it describes placing the barcode on the columns to allow more room for the cover design and make the barcode less prominent. It also discusses placing the masthead, main image, strapline, cover lines, headlines and other elements.
For the double page spread, it highlights using one of the photo images for the spread with an effective layout that draws attention through a large side image, overlaying pull quote and embedded quote box in the text.
The document then discusses color choices, font selection, potential magazine names, inspiration from other magazines, and finalizing the two
This document outlines the planning and production schedule for a fanzine about the history of hip hop music. It includes mood boards and layout designs for sections on the 80s, 90s, and 00s eras. For each era, the author plans to include lists of influential artists and albums from that time period, as well as background information, images, and discussions of key events. The production schedule allocates approximately 2 lessons to complete each page, with 3-4 lessons left for revisions, and sets a deadline of 3 weeks to finish the fanzine.
The document provides instructions for a media coursework assignment to design the front page layout of a new school/college magazine. Students must produce the front page layout featuring a student photograph using desktop publishing and image editing software. They must also produce a mock-up of the contents page layout. Students will be assessed on research and planning, production, and evaluation.
The document provides instructions for a media coursework assignment to design the front page layout of a new school/college magazine. Students must produce the front page layout featuring a student photograph and text using desktop publishing and image editing software. They must also produce a mock-up of the contents page layout. Students will be assessed on research and planning, production, and evaluation.
This document outlines the process of creating a music magazine called "Foul" using Adobe Photoshop. It begins by describing research conducted on existing music magazines to understand conventions. It then discusses developing plans for the front cover, contents page, and feature article spreads. The document walks through various steps taken to design each element in Photoshop, including experimenting with layouts, images, fonts, and effects. Audience research was also conducted to help define the target demographic and their preferences. The goal was to produce a drum-n-bass/dance magazine that both uses traditional conventions while also challenging them.
The document proposes a new music magazine called "Pop!" focused on pop music and aimed at teenage girls aged 13-18. Key details include:
- The magazine will feature interviews, artist posters, concert photos to allow readers to connect with their favorite artists.
- The front cover and double page spread will use a colorful design inspired by 1990s magazine Smash Hits, with a pink and blue color scheme.
- It will be 32 pages long, sized at A4, and released every two weeks at a cost of 99p, mirroring the format of the popular Smash Hits magazine.
The document provides production details for a coursework assignment to design the front page, contents page, and a double-page spread for a new music magazine. It outlines the tasks, which are to design the front cover featuring an image and text, a contents page layout, and a double-page article spread. It also lists the assessment criteria of research and planning, production, and evaluation. Additional pages provide definitions of magazine design elements and conventions, as well as research results from an audience survey to help inform the design of the magazine.
This document provides details on the planning and design of two music magazines called Mixer and Xtra. It includes sections on mood boards, target audiences, layouts, and summaries of ideas for each magazine. The key differences between the magazines are that Mixer will focus on R&B and hip hop artists who have been in the industry longer, while Xtra will feature newer artists and offer a chance to win Beats headphones to appeal to younger readers. Both magazines will take inspiration from the layout and style of XXL magazine but with some customized elements.
Similar to Unit 14 - Producing a Print Based Media Product (LO1 - LO4) (20)
The poster is advertising the Wireless Festival in the UK. It uses bright colors representing the festival's main sponsor, Capital Radio. Each day of the festival is represented by a different color, with the headlining act for that day highlighted in that color. This is intended to clearly showcase who the main acts are each day. The diverse colors also represent the diversity of people, cultures, food, drinks and ages at the festival. The target audience is ages 16-25, as this reflects the types of artists performing and the energetic atmosphere of the festival. Some issues with the representation could be taking offense that the headliners are made to stand out from other acts.
The poster is advertising the Wireless Festival in the UK. It uses bright colors representing the festival's main sponsor, Capital Radio. Each day of the festival is represented by a different color, with the headlining act for that day highlighted in that color. This is intended to clearly showcase who the main acts are each day. The diverse colors also represent the diversity of people, cultures, food, drinks and ages at the festival. The target audience is ages 16-25, as this reflects the types of artists performing and the energetic atmosphere of the festival. Some issues with the representation could be taking offense that the headliners are made to stand out from other acts.
The poster is advertising the Wireless Festival in the UK. It uses bright colors that reflect the festival's main sponsor, Capital Radio. Each day of the festival is represented by a different color, with the headlining act for that day highlighted in that color. This is intended to clearly showcase who the main act will be each day. The variety of colors also represents the diversity of people, cultures, food, drinks and ages at the festival. The target audience is ages 16-25, as this reflects the types of artists performing and the energetic atmosphere. Some issues with the representation could be if people take offense to certain acts being more prominently featured than others.
Snapchat is a social media app that allows users to share photos, videos, and messages. The key features are that content shared disappears after a set time period. The target audience is primarily 18-24 year olds who use the app to stay connected with friends and share moments. Snapchat generates revenue primarily from advertisements placed throughout the app, including on user stories, the discover page, and through sponsored lenses and filters. Some legal and ethical issues around social media include ensuring government communications comply with open meetings acts and protecting user privacy and freedom of information.
- The document provides evidence of the materials and environment used to present a pitch for a magazine. This included using Prezi to create an animated presentation, an Apple computer connected to a projector and whiteboard, and a slide changer.
- Feedback on the presentation was collected through a survey on Survey Monkey. Feedback indicated the presenter "ummed" excessively and needed to know figures better. However, most ratings for how the pitch was presented were 8, 9, or 10.
- Areas for improving the pitch included more details on marketing, spending power of the target audience, and marketing costs. The document includes screenshots of the presentation, survey results, and feedback for strengthening the pitch.
The document outlines the magazine production process over a 4 week period, including deciding on a publication date, acquiring content, editing, layout, proofreading, printing, and distribution. Key stages include editorial decisions on content, acquiring articles and graphics, sub-editing, page layout, proofreading printed copies, sending the magazine to the printer, and distributing copies to retailers and the public. The production plan schedule provides details on when each step in the process will be completed to meet the deadline for releasing the magazine within the 4 week timeframe.
Q Magazine is a UK music publication that has been published since 1986. It is currently published by Bauer Media, which is the largest magazine publisher in Britain. Bauer Media owns over 100 magazines and websites in the UK.
The production process for Q Magazine involves determining a publication date, acquiring content from in-house and external writers, editing the content, laying out the pages, proofreading, sending files to the printer, and distributing the finished magazines to retailers.
Q Magazine targets its audience of 18-40 year olds across both genders and middle to working classes. It builds brand loyalty through extensions like the Q Awards and a mobile app, and maintains an online presence on YouTube, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram to
This document outlines the process for creating a poster advertising a music festival. It includes drafting designs, developing a logo, selecting fonts and graphics, creating a mood board and campaign message. It also discusses scheduling the work, editing and fact-checking the poster, and conducting a risk assessment. The goal is to provide all necessary information about the festival lineup and create a visually appealing design that attracts people to attend.
The document discusses advertising for the Wireless Festival through various methods. It begins by outlining the festival's target audience as being ages 16-25, appealing to both males and females from middle to working class backgrounds. It then discusses how Capital Radio sponsors and promotes the festival through radio advertisements and competitions. Social media is also a major platform used by both artists performing and the festival organizers to promote the event. The document concludes by noting Wireless begins advertising tickets in January/February to capitalize on people receiving cash gifts over the holidays.
Unit 1 - Analysing a Print Based Media Product (LO1 - LO4)stamkostas3068
Townsquare Media owns and publishes 'XXL' magazine, which focuses on content related to hip hop music. 'XXL' was founded in 1997 and has a circulation of around 130,000 readers. As a publisher, Townsquare aims to connect audiences with content, brands, and topics they care about through its portfolio of magazines, which also includes King and Antenna magazines. While Townsquare has competitors in the music magazine industry such as Bauer and publishers of Vibe magazine, 'XXL' has established itself as the top-selling music magazine on newsstands by covering breaking news and new music in the hip hop genre.
Unit 13 – LO4 & LO5 Planning and Pitching a Print Based Media Product stamkostas3068
The document provides details of the environment and materials used for a magazine pitch presentation. It includes images of the slide changer, computer, projector, and interactive whiteboard used to display the presentation. Feedback from peers on the Survey Monkey survey included needing to reduce verbal fillers and know figures without having to refer to notes. The production schedule for the chosen magazine outlines the process from deciding content and cover themes to layout, editing, proofreading, and printing.
Unit 13 – LO1 Planning and Pitching a Print Based Media Product stamkostas3068
XXL Magazine is a monthly music magazine focused on hip hop and rap genres. It is published by Townsquare Media and has a circulation of around 143,000. The magazine covers breaking news in hip hop, new music releases from major artists, and gossip/beefs between artists. It aims to promote hip hop music and culture. Content includes interviews, album reviews, freestyle videos, and documentaries. The target audience is ages 16-30, mainly male, and middle to working class individuals interested in following trends in hip hop music and fashion.
Unit 1 - Analysing a Print Based Media Product (LO1 - LO4)stamkostas3068
The document provides information about a media analysis project for "XXL" magazine. It discusses:
- "XXL" is an American hip hop magazine published by Townsquare Media, focusing on content related to rap music.
- Townsquare Media owns radio stations, events, and digital properties and aims to connect audiences with content they enjoy.
- As the publisher, Townsquare ensures "XXL" magazine's content stays relevant to rap fans by covering new albums, singles, and industry news.
- Key people at "XXL" include the Managing Editor, Editor-in-Chief, and Deputy Editor who oversee the magazine's production and content.
- "XXL" aims
Leveraging Generative AI to Drive Nonprofit InnovationTechSoup
In this webinar, participants learned how to utilize Generative AI to streamline operations and elevate member engagement. Amazon Web Service experts provided a customer specific use cases and dived into low/no-code tools that are quick and easy to deploy through Amazon Web Service (AWS.)
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
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 ...
Communicating effectively and consistently with students can help them feel at ease during their learning experience and provide the instructor with a communication trail to track the course's progress. This workshop will take you through constructing an engaging course container to facilitate effective communication.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
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Film vocab for eal 3 students: Australia the movie
Unit 14 - Producing a Print Based Media Product (LO1 - LO4)
1.
2. Unit 14
Producing a Print Based Media
product
Stam Kostas
3068
Centre Number: 64135
3.
4. Content
1. Rough Sketches
2. Final Sketches
3. House Style
4. Font Style
5. Masthead Ideas
6. Images of Influence
7. Mood Board
8. Draft Articles
9. Graphic Layout
10. Photography Plan
11. Test Photography
12. Prop List
13. Production Plan
14. Resources Needed
15. Conclusion
5. Rough Sketches
Masthead: The masthead will be in the top left hand
corner of one of my ideas, and in the center of the
second one, so that it is easily seen by the reader and
they recognize the magazine easily when they see it.
Strapline: The strapline will be placed to the right of
one of my ideas, next to the masthead, and in the
other the strapline will go through the masthead,
either side on the center.
Cover Stories: The cover stories will be found on the
right hand side of both ideas and then there will be
puff promotions, adverts and such things to the left
or right hand side of either of the ideas.
Main Image: The main image will be in the center of
both ideas which will attract the readers attention
when they see the magazine as it will show them
exactly who is going to be interviewed for the main
article, in this issue of the magazine.
Barcode: The barcode will be
placed on the bottom right
hand corner of both ideas as it
will then be out of the way of
the image and the other bits of
text.
Main Headline: The main
headline will be place to the right
hand side of the main image on
both of the ideas which will allow
for the main image to be seen
clearly and to be focused on.
6. Rough Sketches Continued
Headline: The headline will be placed at the top or top left hand corner of each of the
DPS ideas, as seen.
Stand First: The stand first will be found below the headline or to either side of the
main image, next to the artist so that the reader knows exactly who is being talked
about, along with a little back story about the article on the artist.
Photos: There would only be the main image on the DPS ideas, as I want the reader to
focus on the artist being interviewed and nothing else, therefore no other images will
be on there.
Drop Capital: The drop capital will be where the QnA starts on each of the articles, s
this will attract the readers attention and let them know that there is where the article
starts.
Overall: At the bottom of each page there will be the credits for the editing and the
article, along with the main image editing and creating, but there will also be the
social media links for the magazine, at the bottom left hand corner along with the
credits, and on the far right hand corner, there will be the page number and name of
the magazine, along with a link to our website.
7. Final Sketches
For my final front cover sketch, I chose this one
because of the layout, the color scheme and the
placement of all of the key things such as the
Masthead, the Main Image, the Background, the
Cover Lines and the Puff Promotions. I felt that this
was the most appealing front cover to use because
of the use of the colors on the Background, but also
the way that the Main Image would look on the
page, but most importantly the layout which it
would follow for the final product.
For my final DPS, I chose this one because of the way that the pages
are laid out. Specifically I liked the way that I had a whole page just
for the main image and a whole dedicated background for it, but then
I also likes the way that the page full of content was laid out, with the
Main heading at the top, the Stand First below it, and then having the
double column for the Question and Answer interview of the artist
displayed on the main image on the right.
8. House Style
Color Scheme: The magazine would consist of a color scheme that has the colors of Red, White and Black on it, as this would
convey the use of the general Hip-Hop and Rap theme color scheme that can be seen in most of the album covers of artists, on
the previous moodboard slides. This specific color scheme seems to be very popular within the use of the album covers and
also sever magazine styles such as XXL’s and Vibe’s themes that they follow throughout their magazines. So by following this
specified color scheme I would be looking at focusing on the same sort of target audience and so attracting more readers to
read my magazine and the content inside it which would be relevant to their favorite artists and genres of music.
Font Style: From these two selections of fonts for each magazine, “NXT EP” and “313”, I will be choosing one of each font that I
would like to, or prefer to use in my final magazine front cover and double page spread (DPS). From the two rows above, I have
chosen, the “American Captain” font for “NXT EP”, as this has clean, cut edges that will bring that almost harsh connotation
towards the magazine and almost describe what sort of content will be found inside. Next for “313” I have chosen to use the
“Funk Machine” font, due to its curvature and the sort of ‘old’ style it has to it, which would be relevant to the connotations
behind ‘313’, as it is Detroit’s area code, and Detroit is quite an old and run down city, therefore showing its age and relevance
to its meaning.
Social Media: In order to achieve good publicity for the magazine and get a name that is well known for it, an app will be
developed for it over time, further we will create a Snapchat, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube account in which all the most
recent content will be released on as well as news and stories on artists that are high in-demand at the moment. This will
ensure that our customers will be able to keep up with news from their favorite artists before the newest issue of the magazine
comes out, and so they can look ahead into finding out more when the full magazine issue is released and that story is
mentioned in it.
10. SHD (Pronounced Shade): The
Masthead of the magazine,
referral to XXL’s 3 letter name and
also further depiction of some of
the ‘shade’, abuse or unfairly
disputed comments against the
artists in the Rap industry.
313 (Area Code of Detroit): A lot of Up-And-
Coming artists originate from Detroit, which
is where you would find ‘Raw’ talent form
younger artists as they come up from
tougher neighborhoods, a good example
would be Eminem as he was coming up in
the mid-to-late 90’s through rap battles and
a tough life with his family and work life.
STRAPLINE: “The story hidden behind the
truth”.
NXT EP: This is inspiration from the
song title ‘The Next Episode’ By Dr.
Dre, Snoop Dogg and Nate Dogg, from
Dr. Dre’s album, 2001. This would go
into further meaning of the magazine
looking into the ‘Next Episode’ of the
Industry or Rap Genre. STAPLINE:
“Look Ahead to a New Era”.
Masthead Ideas
These were the initial ideas for the Masthead, the reasons have been given
beneath but specifically where I got the names was critical and emphasized the
meaning of the Masthead to the reader, and almost showed off what the
contents of the magazine would be like just from the Masthead, therefore
ensuring the reader that what they are reading is in fact a Rap and Hip Hop
magazine, and not a pop music one. In the end I decided to use NXT EP and 313
as my final ideas, and decided to carry through NXT EP as my final choice, due
to the meaning behind it and also the strapline that came along with it, as I felt
it symbolized how Rap and Hip Hop are looked at nowadays and how it will
keep evolving as we move from Era to Era of generations and people, and from
one great to another.
11. Images of Influence
These are the images of influence that I chose to base my magazine ideas off of, and to also get
inspiration for the final design of the front cover and DPS, but also such things as editing methods which
would help my magazine look far more professional and attractive to the target or intended market
audience, therefore gaining sales and more profits. I chose 4 different rappers to the right, Yelawolf,
Future, Anderson .Paak and Kendrick Lamar, because of the way that they are portrayed in the images,
and the way they look, which inspired me to get the correct clothing and attire for my photo-shoot for
the front cover of NXT EP, but also choose the editorial methods, such as using Black and White for the
main images and backgrounds. Below I then chose 6 different XXL magazine front covers from different
time-lines, ranging from people such as the Notorious BIG, and the earlier days of Eminem, all the way to
Kendrick Lamar posing with Dr. Dre, and then Kanye West, which also gave me some ideas for my
magazine front covers but also the DPS.
13. Moodboard Summary 2
• For this Moodboard I used the inspiration of “NXT EP” due to the fact that, the content within it will be relevant to the most up-to-
date news headlines or stories in relevance to the Rap/Hip-Hop industry. There will be a large amount of focus on artists that are big,
and up-and-coming, specifically to do with new releases from them, hence the name “NXT EP” as it will be looking ahead to what
music is really seen as ‘now’ or new, therefore looking into the artists future due to the release of this new album.
• I specifically chose these artists because, for example, Yelawolf (Middle image with hat and tattoos on neck), has just recently signed a
contract with Eminem’s record Label, Shady Records, and he has just recently got big through this signing and further his single
releases with other famous artists such as Lil’ Jon and Travis Barker, whom he has made hit singles with, but further his own, recently
released album ‘Love Story’ which has hit very high numbers in the charts, at the time of its release.
• Further I used an image of Kendrick Lamar, who has just recently ‘Blown Up’ in the rap scene. Being a rapper from Compton, CA and
growing up in those types of neighborhoods, influenced by gangs, drugs and money, he of course grew up listening to NWA, Dr. Dre
and Tupac, amongst many other West Coast artists from the 80’s and 90’s. These are the artists that influenced him to become the
sensation that he is in the industry at this moment and time, with his most recent album release being ‘To Pimp A Butterfly’, which has
become extremely recognized to many artists, and of course Hip-Hop/ Rap fans across the world. So, along with the rest of the
pictured artists, A$AP Rocky, Danny Brown, Future, Anderson Paak., and G Eazy, he is growing to be the next ‘father figure’ in this
music industry, right next to his inspiration, Dr. Dre himself.
14. Draft Article
• Draft Interview for NXT EP & 313 Magazines.
• Me: Hi Billy, how are you?
• Billy: Hi Stam, I am good thank you, you aight?
• Me: Yes I am good thank you. So, rumors have been going around, and I have heard that you are soon to release a
new album, but are undecided of its date? Is this right?
• Billy: Yes, this is right. I am still deciding when I should release this album, and I am still not sure what songs to put in
it. The record is crazy. There are features with other artists, which will remain unnamed, but I am still to pick what
tracks will make it to the final cut of the record. It’s crazy, simply crazy.
• Me: Have you decided on a name for this album? Lately people are getting hyped up about new albums, but
specifically names. Many rappers like you hold back titles until the last moment. What are you planning to do in
relation to the title of the record?
• Billy: Hmm, to be honest, there’s nothing much to say. The name will come out when the time is right. And that is the
only thing I will say about the release. However, it will be special.
• Me: I have a feeling that there will be some relation to previous records or a project you worked on in the past, and
we are talking years ago, but definitely something special.
• Billy: Well, you could say that, but it’s unexpected and I will say nothing about it. Instead I will refer to it as something
‘Special’ again.
• Me: Okay, well tell us about the last single you released? Were there any specific references to certain people in it?
We all felt like there was a few digs at people.
• Billy: Wow, already on to that yeah? Cool, ‘aight. Well, what’s to say? I said what I said, and it remains forever in the
song. I say what I want to say and it remains. I don’t care about what others think, and don’t even think of this as
being a rude comment or some sh**, I’m simply saying what I wan’ say so I can clear this up.
• Me: Okay, okay. So, in the studio… What actually happens, how do you make the records you make?
• Billy: To be honest, there’s nothing much to it. I simply write the lyrics that I feel are relevant to my mood at the time
or from past experiences, or simply the feel of the songs and how it comes across in my mind. The way I write is
simple, as I want the fans to hear the song the way I hear it, and understand why I write the way I write and the lyrics I
use. The rest, I leave to my producers. They do the magic of making the song and lyrics flow together so well. Wait,
can I tell y’all a lil’ something that you and the fans will love?
• Me: Yeah sure, ha-ha. Go for it man!
• Billy: Right so. The next record… it will be released in CD, MP3 all that sh**… but there will be a little bonus on this
one. There will be a deluxe version available and it will be released in a special and limited edition vinyl record for
those hard core fans man!
• Me: Damn! Okay right, so why is this edition so special that you have made it limited?
• Billy: Well, I wanted to leave that as a surprise but, might as well get the fans hyped up right? So, it’s going to have the
vinyl record inside obviously, then there will be a supersized poster of the album cover and of myself, but finally there
will be a 6ft by 10ft flag of the album cover on it.
•
• Me: Wait, so why a flag?
• Billy: For those hardcore fans man! Like I said, this one will be special. The flag will hang on their walls as I plan this record
to be something they will all remember man.
•
• Me: Alright, cool. So what about features, production and track selection of this record?
• Billy: Once again, man. The features will remain unnamed as I want this to be special, but know that there are some big
names in there. The production, will be done by the usual man that helped me initially, but some will be done by me on
some of the more ‘precious’ tracks, and damn! The selection was tough man, we went through, I think, a total of 100 or
so tracks and finished pieces, but also choppy pieces of chorus’, beats or just verses, until I found the right ones to put in
this record. I wanted to be careful about the choice of these due to the fact that it is a special record, for me, and the
fans.
•
• Me: Okay, so we really aren’t getting any extra information are we? Hmm, okay. So what about ideas for a next record
or project? Have you planned in your head to work on anything, or come up with a title and are still unsure?
• Billy: Na man, I’m afraid not, sorry! And well, to be honest man, I was thinking of a couple things, but still ain’t sure! Like, I
was thinking of doing a full colab’ or feature record with either 1 or 2 different guys in the scene at the moment, but I’m
not too sure yet. Lets just say I’m working on it man.
•
• Me: Alright. To finish off, the fans want to know. What the hell is happening with the beef between you and Lil’ Kidzy?
• Billy: Aaa, okay well lets finish on that then. To be honest, sh** just went south man, and honestly a couple lyrics were
thrown between us here and there, dissing, but that’s it from what I can see. I don’t want it to turn into anything more, it
gives the fans something to listen to and react to; it gives everyone something to pay attention to. That’s it, and I hope it
stays that way.
•
• Me: I see, I see. Well, thanks a lot man, I know the fans will appreciate this, and to be honest, I know I enjoyed it. So,
once again thank you man! Hope we talk again soon about some new things!
• Billy: Aight man thanks a lot! But yeah, definitely, speak again real soon after the release of the record.
15. Graphic Layouts
NXT EP FRONT COVERS
Masthead And Strapline
Puff
promotions
Cover Lines
Main Image
Main
Heading
Masthead
Strapline
Main
Heading
Cover Lines
Puff
promo
tions
Main Image
1 2
16. Graphic Layouts
NXT EP Double Page
Spreads
Main Image
Page Number and Web Link
Q n A Q n A
Information on artist.
Drop
Capital
Main Heading
LOGO
Main Heading/
ArtworkLOGO
Page Number and Web Link
Theme
or Art of
Magazin
e (Red or
Black
Faded.)
Album Cover of
Artist & Specific
Details or
Reviews on it.
Page Number and Web Link
Main Image
Information on artist.
Q n A / Interview
Content.
1 2
19. Prop List
Below is evidence of the environment in which I completed the presentation of my Pitch in for
my magazine. From the images, you can see that I used a slide changer, bottom right, which
helped with presenting, as it meant I didn’t have to keep going back and forth to using the
keyboard in order to change to the next slide. I then used an Apple Mac computer, which loaded
the presentation, which linked to the projector and then to the interactive whiteboard which
allowed my peers to see my presentation and all of my magazine ideas in further detail, but also
see the images and aspects of the Front Covers and Double Page Spreads, in a much larger scale.
20. Production Plan
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
The Date of
publication will be
decided, which will
give the teams a
timeframe to
complete the work in.
The teams will all work
together to also
manage the schedule
of the work that needs
to be done.
The magazine’s editing
team will decide what
topics or content will be
covered within this issue of
the magazine. They will go
through the main content
of this issue of the
magazine, the biggest story
at the moment or the
biggest artist at the
moment, will end up being
on the front cover.
At this stage the teams
get the content from ‘In-
House’ and ‘External’
writers whilst working
on and putting in/
deciding on the graphics
and the artwork of the
magazine. This is a vital
stage because the teams
have got to get the
artwork and the graphics
whilst making it look
professional and
relevant to the brand
(Brand Identity) of the
Magazine (NXT EP or
313).
At this stage the teams
get the content from ‘In-
House’ and ‘External’
writers whilst working
on and putting in/
deciding on the graphics
and the artwork of the
magazine. This is a vital
stage because the teams
have got to get the
artwork and the graphics
whilst making it look
professional and
relevant to the brand
(Brand Identity) of the
Magazine (NXT EP or
313).
A ‘Sub-Editor’ or an
‘Editor’ of the magazine,
will be going through the
magazine and checking
that all the content is
correct by fact, there are
no grammatical errors,
there is correct grammar
and punctuation use, the
correct house style and
the page layout of all the
pages in the magazine is
correct.
N/A N/A
Complete: (Monday)
(26/12/16)
Complete: (27/12/16)
(Tuesday)
Complete: (28/12/16 –
5/1/17) (Wednesday –
Thursday)
Complete: (28/12/16 –
5/1/17) (Wednesday –
Thursday)
Complete: (6/1/17)
(Friday)
Complete: N/A Complete: N/A
21. Production Plan
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
In this stage the ‘Layout
Staff’ use programs such
as ‘InDesign’ or
‘PageMaker’ to typeset
and layout all the pages
of the magazine. At this
stage the decided
adverts from companies
get placed into the
magazine too which is
the way that the
magazine makes a large
proportion of its profits,
therefore is a key stage
too.
In this stage the ‘Layout
Staff’ use programs such
as ‘InDesign’ or
‘PageMaker’ to typeset
and layout all the pages
of the magazine. At this
stage the decided
adverts from companies
get placed into the
magazine too which is
the way that the
magazine makes a large
proportion of its profits,
therefore is a key stage
too.
In this stage the
‘Editorial Team’ print out
a hard copy of the
magazine’s issue in order
to read through it until
every member of staff is
satisfied that there are
no errors within the
magazine, and if there
are they correct it on the
DTP File. This is a vital
stage because it ensures
that the layout, content
and final product meets
the satisfactory needs of
the editorial team before
it heads out to the
general public for retail.
The entire magazine gets
sent to the printer who’s
job is to print out the
magazines' copies. Here
the magazine is ‘Pre-
Pressed’ and the
magazine is checked to
ensure that all fonts and
images have gone
through correctly and
print out as the rest of
the magazine does. They
then print out a few
copies which get sent
back to the publication’s
editor and if that team is
satisfied they go ahead
and print out the
thousands of copies they
need to print out in
order to meet the
demand of the magazine
according to the target
market/ audience.
The entire magazine gets
sent to the printer who’s
job is to print out the
magazines' copies. Here
the magazine is ‘Pre-
Pressed’ and the
magazine is checked to
ensure that all fonts and
images have gone
through correctly and
print out as the rest of
the magazine does. They
then print out a few
copies which get sent
back to the publication’s
editor and if that team is
satisfied they go ahead
and print out the
thousands of copies they
need to print out in
order to meet the
demand of the magazine
according to the target
market/ audience.
In this final stage the
printing company will
have finished printing
and will pack away the
magazines and send
them to a warehouse,
and from the warehouse
they get distributed and
sold to the public and
this is the point where
the public get access to
all of the new content
and can catch up an all
of the news on their
favorite artists.
In this final stage the
printing company will
have finished printing
and will pack away the
magazines and send
them to a warehouse,
and from the warehouse
they get distributed and
sold to the public and
this is the point where
the public get access to
all of the new content
and can catch up an all
of the news on their
favorite artists.
Complete: (9/1/17-
10/1/17) (Monday –
Tuesday)
Complete: (9/1/17-
10/1/17) (Monday –
Tuesday)
Complete: (11/1/17)
(Wednesday)
Complete: (12/1/17-
13/1/17) (Thursday-
Friday)
Complete: (12/1/17-
13/1/17) (Thursday-
Friday)
Complete: (14/1/17 –
16/1/17) (Saturday-
Monday)
Complete: (14/1/17 –
16/1/17) (Saturday-
Monday)
22. Resources Needed
Equipment Cost
Office Space £275.00/ Month or £3,300.00/ Year
MAC Computer (Desktops) X30 £52,470.00
Adobe Creative Cloud All Apps + Adobe Stock X30 £20,916.00 /Year
Printer (HP PageWide 377dw Multifunction Business Inkjet Colour Printer (J9V80B) X2 £599.98 Total
Cameras (Nikon D4S 16.2 MP CMOS FX Digital SLR with Full 1080p HD Video (Body Only) NIKON) X4 £16,400.00 Total
Lighting Equipment (Excelvan Studio Continuous Lighting Kit Softbox Kit Background Set -- 2 Softbox +
9*6 ft. Backdrops(Black White Green) + 10*6.5ft Background Support + Light Stand + 2x125W 5500K
Bulbs + Portable Bag) X2
£161.98 Total
Paper (Xerox Performer Paper A4 80gsm White 003R90649 Pack of 5 Reams) X5 £87.45 Total
Ink for Printer (Black, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow) X4 £245.24 Total or £61.31 Each
Stationary (Staedtler 430 F-9CP5 Stick Fine Ballpoint Pen - Black, Pack of 50) X5 £40.00 Total
Desks (Office Corner Desk Coavas L-Shaped Office Wood Desk Large Corner PC Gaming Table Computer
Workstation for Home and Office Use Corner Desk, Black) X30
£1,559.70 Total
Chairs (Office Desk Chair PU Leather Computer Gaming Swivel Adjustable Racing Sport Chair - Black) X30 £1,649.70 Total
TOTAL COST £97,430.05
24. Conclusion
In conclusion we can see how pre-production materials are provided and used in order to create an original and
new print media product. We have to find and research specifics such as the cost of all of the equipment that will
be used in order to take all of the images and videos for the print product, but also the costs for the software and
hardware needed for the editing and creation of the final version of the print product. In order to have a
successfully published and profitable print product, we have to ensure that we do a Production Plan that will
ensure that the magazine gets assembled, checked over, finished and published to the public for reading. By
having a successful Production Plan it will ensure that all of those steps get completed on time and so the reader
will be able to put their hands on a new print product that has all of the information they need in order to catch
up on their favorite artists, and the music they love. Further we produce graphic layouts on software such as
Microsoft Word or PowerPoint, which let us produce drafts of each page, including the front covers and DPS
through the magazine, and so allow for easy access from other members of staff but also allows for easy editing if
any corrections need to be made for the drafts of the magazine as a whole before it is constructed, finalized and
published.
27. Location Recce
Location:
• Time.
• Date.
• Why.
The Photo-shoot had taken place on the 12/11/2016 and it was
just after 1pm through until about 2/ 2.30pm.
The Photo-shoot had taken place on this
date due to the availability of free time
between myself and the model (Billy).
As for laws and regulations, if I had wanted
to take pictures in a private area or a place
where company names are involved, then I
would have to ask for permission from them
in order to take any images and then I would
have to also reconsider any potential hazards
and risks within this new area. However I did
not take any images in a public place or in a
building that was private or anywhere were
company names were involved, therefore I
did not have to ask for any permission or
have to reconsider the hazards and risks of
these new areas.
Picture Needed/
Required:
• Lighting.
• Close Up.
• Short Type.
• Props/ Clothing/
Equipment.
• Why.
The shots I used in my magazine were short and up-close, some
props were used at one stage for some of the images, but generally
the images I used consisted of no props, just what the model was
wearing, which was their own clothing. The lighting came from the
flash of the camera, and all other lights in the room were turned
off, and this was in order to get a good picture with decent lighting
but also to make the editing process much easier as the
background didn’t blend in with the model.
I used shorts that were short and up-close
due to the way it portrayed the model and
the significance and relevance it had with the
magazine I was basing mine off of, XXL. I
decided to use just a flash camera and no
other lighting in order to make the editing
process much easier, further down the line.
Permission Needed:
• Contact Needed
to be made.
The photos were taken against a plain wall in my house, and also a
plain white door but the images I used were the ones against the
wall, therefore no permission was needed.
I used a wall that was plain in order to get a
smooth background and have a simple and
different color to the clothing of the model,
therefore making the editing process much
easier.
Potential Hazards/
Risks:
• Lighting could
break.
• Props could break.
I had no potential hazards or risks when taking the photos as there
was just a wall in a hallway with nothing near it or on it, therefore
the model would not have been placed in danger.
There were no hazards or risks, as the
lighting came from the flash from my phone
and the images were taken on my phone.
28. Hazards at the Workplace
Health and Safety at Work Act:
Health and Safety at Work Act 1974. Often referred to as HASAW or HSW, this Act of Parliament is the main piece of UK health
and safety legislation. It places a duty on all employers "to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety and
welfare at work" of all their employees. This means that the employers must take care of their employees as for as they
possibly can, to reason.
It is an extremely important Act and piece of Legislation as it ensures the safety of all of the Employees when they are in the
workplace, therefore ensuring that they will be coming to work happy and willing to work, knowing that they will be safe at
work when they do turn up for a days work, regardless of what they do. It also places trust in the employer as they have to
protect their employee within reason, so they have to ensure that they provide them with the safety measures and training for
when they are doing any kind of job.
This is used in a workplace to ensure that the employee comes into work happy and willing to work in the environment that
has been provided to them by their employer, therefore ensuring that work does get done regardless of the risk, as the
employee knows that they will be safe as long as they have received the training they need and have been provided with the
safety measures necessary to be working in this environment.
The purpose of this Act is to ensure and guarantee the safety of the employee to reason, as stated above. In other words
ensuring that when the employee is working hard, they are safe and their employer ensures that this is the case by providing
them with specialist/ specific training and other safety measures for the environment in which they are working in.
Source: https: //www.google.co.uk/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=health+and+safety+at+work+act+1974&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&gfe_rd=cr&ei=qs4SWcGEMa2n8wfF-
JygAg
29. Legal and Ethical Issues
• The IPSO (Independent Press Standards Organization), has a set of rules called the Editor’s Code of Practice, in which the editor of a
magazine, newspaper or any other form of media, has to follow a specific set of rules set by this Organization. The code itself is written by
the Editors’ Code Committee and further enforced by the IPSO. The latest version of the Editors’ Code of Practice came into effect on 1
January 2016. the code is there to set the highest professional standards in the publishing industry and ensure that no information is
misinterpreted or misleading, but further that no privacy is breached of other people.
• They focus specifically on the categories of, Accuracy, Privacy, Harassment, Intrusion into grief or shock, Reporting Suicide, Children, Children
in sex cases, Hospitals, Reporting of crime, Clandestine devices and subterfuge, Victims of sexual assault, Discrimination, Financial
journalism, Confidential sources, Witness payments in criminal trials and Payment to criminals. They are all of the categories that are
included in the Editor’s Code of Practice, which include a specific set of rules that the editor must follow, under each category. By having
these rules they are ensuring that no information or facts are misinterpreted about a person, further that no rights are abused and that
respect is shown to people by following their privacy rules, if for example they ask fro some information to not be ‘leaked’ or released to the
public.
• Initially it was the PCC (Press Complaints Commission) that dealt with these rules and set specific standards that editors would have to
follow, and now this has been taken over by the IPSO.
https://www.ipso.co.uk/editors-code-of-practice/
30. Watermarking
Digital Watermarking is the fact or process of embedding a piece of code in a digital image, video, or audio
file in order to provide copyright information. By doing this it allows the person who embedded the code to
know that the image, or content that they embedded the code in, is strictly theirs and if anyone else tries
to use it, well, they wont because you cannot get rid of watermarks on any kind of content, no matter how
hard you try with editing.
Digital watermarking can be employed for multiple purposes, such as:
• Copyright protection
• Source tracking
• Broadcast tracking, such as watermarked videos from global news organizations
• Hidden communication
There are two types of digital watermarking:
Visible Digital Watermarking: Visible data is embedded as the watermark. This can be a logo or a text that
denotes a digital medium's owner.
Invisible Digital Watermarking: The data embedded is invisible or, in case of audio content, inaudible.
Robust watermarks involve blending signal amplitude with large bandwidth sizes and a short message
length. Frequency domain capabilities and mixed-domain techniques, when added to signals, are believed
to provide the right amount of robustness in order to guard against watermark attacks.
The publisher Playboy has used an invisible form of digital watermarking to detect where its copyrighted
material has been illegally posted on other websites.
31. Copyright and IP
• “The current act is the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. The law gives the creators of
literary, dramatic, musical, artistic works, sound recordings, broadcasts, films and typographical
arrangement of published editions, rights to control the ways in which their material may be used.”
• When looking at the use of Copyright in a magazine we would be looking at examples of images and
adverts from big and smaller companies, that have their logo or specific graphics, such as new
products or posters related to content, or even their own content and logo. They would place the
Copyright sign on the footer of this page of content, or on the base of the image, or even
underneath it, therefore allowing people to know that this content or imagery is owned and made
by this company, and cannot be used by other people for commercial uses unless granted so by the
company itself.
• If people do not follow these rules then they can be prosecuted and jailed for using other peoples
content or imagery without their permission. But this can work both ways as companies can use
peoples work from smaller businesses or places of work, without having their authority, and if this is
found out, then the smaller business or company can try and sue the business for what they have
done, or simply ask them to pay a smaller fee towards the use of their content or imagery.
Source:
https://www.copyrightservice.co.uk/copyri
ght/p01_uk_copyright_law
32. Copyright and IP
• When looking at examples of each Sub-Category of protection, we could look at Criminal Records,
and how they tend to be a major part of how information gets out and twisted about artists or
celebrities. So in order for the magazine to follow these rules about the confidential information
that an artist may state about themselves in an interview, they must not change or misinterpret the
information given to them by the artist, or not publicize it at all if this is the wish of the artist. This
can be due to a few reasons such as the persona of the artist and how they feel it would be
interpreted by their fans or further audience, and this is vital as they do not want to suddenly
disappoint their fans or audience in a sense that it would make them stop listening to this artist’s
music. This is why information such as this, is sometimes strictly between the artist and the person
interviewing them for a magazine or article of a sort.
• Further we could look at how ‘Accurate’ the information that is published, should be, and why.
When an interview is conducted with an artist, the information or facts that they give about certain
topics or specific people, then the information, as before, should not be misinterpreted or given out
falsely. This is because the information would then be false, and the blame would go towards the
artist, instead of the Interviewer, editing team or publishing company, whom may have made the
mistake. Therefore, fans will lose their trust and love for this artist and will most likely not listen to
what they say any longer.
Source: https://www.gov.uk/data-
protection/the-data-protection-act
33. Data Protection Act 1988
The Data Protection Act controls how your personal information is used
by organisations, businesses or the government.
Everyone responsible for using data has to follow strict rules called ‘data
protection principles’. They must make sure the information is:
• Used fairly and lawfully
• Used for limited, specifically stated purposes
• Used in a way that is adequate, relevant and not excessive
• Accurate
• Kept for no longer than is absolutely necessary
• Handled according to people’s data protection rights
• Kept safe and secure
• Not transferred outside the European Economic Area without
adequate protection
There is stronger legal protection for more sensitive information, such as:
• Ethnic background
• Political opinions
• Religious beliefs
• Health
• Sexual health
• Criminal records Source: https://www.gov.uk/data-protection/the-data-
protection-act
34. Conclusion
In conclusion, we can see that through this learning objective it was all about the safety of
people at a workplace, looking at the safety and specifics of the photo-shoot and any risks or
hazards that came with taking any images in certain areas, and recognizing what to do in those
environments in order to ensure both our own safety and the model’s safety. Further it was all
about looking at the legal and ethical issues that came with taking images of a model, and also
using them in a magazine that would be published, therefore looking at the legal side of using
the images on a published piece of media work. This also consisted of looking at the Copyright
and legality of the images but also the ownership of them and what was and was not allowed
to be done to them.
35.
36. Content
1. Setting up Equipment
2. Pre- Production Material
3. Production Process
4. Operating Desktop Publishing Tools
5. Conclusion
37. Setting up and Equipment
Equipment Cost
Office Space £275.00/ Month or £3,300.00/ Year
MAC Computer (Desktops) X30 £52,470.00
Adobe Creative Cloud All Apps + Adobe Stock X30 £20,916.00 /Year
Printer (HP PageWide 377dw Multifunction Business Inkjet Colour Printer (J9V80B) X2 £599.98 Total
Cameras (Nikon D4S 16.2 MP CMOS FX Digital SLR with Full 1080p HD Video (Body Only) NIKON) X4 £16,400.00 Total
Lighting Equipment (Excelvan Studio Continuous Lighting Kit Softbox Kit Background Set -- 2 Softbox +
9*6 ft. Backdrops(Black White Green) + 10*6.5ft Background Support + Light Stand + 2x125W 5500K
Bulbs + Portable Bag) X2
£161.98 Total
Paper (Xerox Performer Paper A4 80gsm White 003R90649 Pack of 5 Reams) X5 £87.45 Total
Ink for Printer (Black, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow) X4 £245.24 Total or £61.31 Each
Stationary (Staedtler 430 F-9CP5 Stick Fine Ballpoint Pen - Black, Pack of 50) X5 £40.00 Total
Desks (Office Corner Desk Coavas L-Shaped Office Wood Desk Large Corner PC Gaming Table Computer
Workstation for Home and Office Use Corner Desk, Black) X30
£1,559.70 Total
Chairs (Office Desk Chair PU Leather Computer Gaming Swivel Adjustable Racing Sport Chair - Black) X30 £1,649.70 Total
TOTAL COST £97,430.05
41. Pre- Production Material Graphic Layouts
NXT EP FRONT COVERS
Masthead And Strapline
Puff
promotions
Cover Lines
Main Image
Main
Heading
Masthead
Strapline
Main
Heading
Cover Lines
Puff
promo
tions
Main Image
1 2
42. Pre- Production Material Graphic Layouts
NXT EP Double Page
Spreads
Main Image
Page Number and Web Link
Q n A Q n A
Information on artist.
Drop
Capital
Main Heading
LOGO
Main Heading/
ArtworkLOGO
Page Number and Web Link
Theme
or Art of
Magazin
e (Red or
Black
Faded.)
Album Cover of
Artist & Specific
Details or
Reviews on it.
Page Number and Web Link
Main Image
Information on artist.
Q n A / Interview
Content.
1 2
43. 313 FRONT COVERS
1 2
Pre- Production Material Graphic Layouts
Main Image
Strapline
Masthead
Puff
promoti
ons
Cover
Lines
Main
Heading
Masthead
Strapline
Sub-Heading
Main
Heading
Main Heading CONT
Main Image
Cover
Lines
Puff
Prom
otion
s
44. Pre- Production Material Graphic Layouts
313 Double Page Spreads
Page Number and Web Link
Q n A Q n A
Main Heading
LOGO Main Heading/ Artwork
LOGO
Page Number and Web Link
Latest Album &
Information on it
/ Artist
Information.
Page Number and Web Link
Main Image
Q n A style content.
Main Image
Album
Cover of
Artist
Faded out artwork/
Theme Colors
Quotes
from
artist’s
Interview
1 2
45. Date Of Publication: The date of publication will be decided on Monday the 26/12/16 at which point the date will be
decided when the public can get their hands onto the latest issue of the magazine. From the time of this decision and
onwards the editorial team and the publishing team have to work together in order to get all of the content for the magazine
and ensure that it is all put together within this 4 week timeframe. (Monday)
Managing the Schedule: In order to meet the deadline for the magazines release date in 4 weeks time, both teams and the
higher up people of the teams have to work alongside each other and keep on top of the timing for the schedule, so plan out
what will be done when. (26/12/16) (Monday)
Editorial and Budgetary Decision: Here the magazine’s editing team will decide what topics or content will be covered within
this issue of the magazine. They will include things such as the main content of this issue of the magazine, the biggest story
at the moment or the biggest artist at the moment, will end up being on the front cover, and so the main story and headline
will be for this, therefore this decision is key for the team to get correct. (27/12/16) (Tuesday)
Content Acquisition: At this stage the teams get the content from ‘In-House’ and ‘External’ writers whilst working on and
putting in/ deciding on the graphics and the artwork of the magazine. This is a vital stage because the teams have got to get
the artwork and the graphics correct and suited to each cover line/ story and make them relevant to the artist that is being
covered in this story, whilst making it look professional and relevant to the brand (Brand Identity) of the Magazine (NXT EP or
313). (28/12/16 – 5/1/17) (Wednesday - Thursday)
Sub-Editing: This is the next step which involves a ‘Sub-Editor’ or an ‘Editor’ of the magazine, going through the magazine
and checking that all the content is correct by fact, there are no grammatical errors, there is correct grammar and
punctuation use, the correct house style and the page layout of all the pages in the magazine is correct. (6/1/17) (Friday)
Source: http://hosbeg.com/the-magazine-production-process/
Production Process/ Plan
46. Page Layout: In this stage the ‘Layout Staff’ use programs such as ‘InDesign’ or ‘PageMaker’ to typeset and layout all the
pages of the magazine. At this stage the decided adverts from companies get placed into the magazine too which is the way
that the magazine makes a large proportion of its profits, therefore is a key stage too. (9/1/17- 10/1/17) (Monday - Tuesday)
Proofreading: In this stage the ‘Editorial Team’ print out a hard copy of the magazine’s issue in order to read through it until
every member of staff is satisfied that there are no errors within the magazine, and if there are they correct it on the DTP
File. This is a vital stage because it ensures that the layout, content and final product meets the satisfactory needs of the
editorial team before it heads out to the general public for retail. (11/1/17) (Wednesday)
File Emailed To Printer: Here the entire magazine gets sent to the printer who’s job is to print out the magazines' copies.
Here the magazine is ‘Pre-Pressed’ and the magazine is checked to ensure that all fonts and images have gone through
correctly and print out as the rest of the magazine does. They then print out a few copies which get sent back to the
publication’s editor and if that team is satisfied they go ahead and print out the thousands of copies they need to print out in
order to meet the demand of the magazine according to the target market/ audience. (12/1/17- 13/1/17) (Thursday- Friday)
Distribution: In this final stage the printing company will have finished printing and will pack away the magazines and send
them to a warehouse, and from the warehouse they get distributed and sold to the public and this is the point where the
public get access to all of the new content and can catch up an all of the news on their favorite artists. (15/1/17 – 16/1/17)
(Sunday-Monday)
Source: http://hosbeg.com/the-magazine-production-process/
Production Process/ Plan
47. Production Process/ Plan
Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
The Date of
publication will be
decided, which will
give the teams a
timeframe to
complete the work in.
The teams will all work
together to also
manage the schedule
of the work that needs
to be done.
The magazine’s editing
team will decide what
topics or content will be
covered within this issue of
the magazine. They will go
through the main content
of this issue of the
magazine, the biggest story
at the moment or the
biggest artist at the
moment, will end up being
on the front cover.
At this stage the teams
get the content from ‘In-
House’ and ‘External’
writers whilst working
on and putting in/
deciding on the graphics
and the artwork of the
magazine. This is a vital
stage because the teams
have got to get the
artwork and the graphics
whilst making it look
professional and
relevant to the brand
(Brand Identity) of the
Magazine (NXT EP or
313).
At this stage the teams
get the content from ‘In-
House’ and ‘External’
writers whilst working
on and putting in/
deciding on the graphics
and the artwork of the
magazine. This is a vital
stage because the teams
have got to get the
artwork and the graphics
whilst making it look
professional and
relevant to the brand
(Brand Identity) of the
Magazine (NXT EP or
313).
A ‘Sub-Editor’ or an
‘Editor’ of the magazine,
will be going through the
magazine and checking
that all the content is
correct by fact, there are
no grammatical errors,
there is correct grammar
and punctuation use, the
correct house style and
the page layout of all the
pages in the magazine is
correct.
N/A N/A
Complete: (Monday)
(26/12/16)
Complete: (27/12/16)
(Tuesday)
Complete: (28/12/16 –
5/1/17) (Wednesday –
Thursday)
Complete: (28/12/16 –
5/1/17) (Wednesday –
Thursday)
Complete: (6/1/17)
(Friday)
Complete: N/A Complete: N/A
48. Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
In this stage the ‘Layout
Staff’ use programs such
as ‘InDesign’ or
‘PageMaker’ to typeset
and layout all the pages
of the magazine. At this
stage the decided
adverts from companies
get placed into the
magazine too which is
the way that the
magazine makes a large
proportion of its profits,
therefore is a key stage
too.
In this stage the ‘Layout
Staff’ use programs such
as ‘InDesign’ or
‘PageMaker’ to typeset
and layout all the pages
of the magazine. At this
stage the decided
adverts from companies
get placed into the
magazine too which is
the way that the
magazine makes a large
proportion of its profits,
therefore is a key stage
too.
In this stage the
‘Editorial Team’ print out
a hard copy of the
magazine’s issue in order
to read through it until
every member of staff is
satisfied that there are
no errors within the
magazine, and if there
are they correct it on the
DTP File. This is a vital
stage because it ensures
that the layout, content
and final product meets
the satisfactory needs of
the editorial team before
it heads out to the
general public for retail.
The entire magazine gets
sent to the printer who’s
job is to print out the
magazines' copies. Here
the magazine is ‘Pre-
Pressed’ and the
magazine is checked to
ensure that all fonts and
images have gone
through correctly and
print out as the rest of
the magazine does. They
then print out a few
copies which get sent
back to the publication’s
editor and if that team is
satisfied they go ahead
and print out the
thousands of copies they
need to print out in
order to meet the
demand of the magazine
according to the target
market/ audience.
The entire magazine gets
sent to the printer who’s
job is to print out the
magazines' copies. Here
the magazine is ‘Pre-
Pressed’ and the
magazine is checked to
ensure that all fonts and
images have gone
through correctly and
print out as the rest of
the magazine does. They
then print out a few
copies which get sent
back to the publication’s
editor and if that team is
satisfied they go ahead
and print out the
thousands of copies they
need to print out in
order to meet the
demand of the magazine
according to the target
market/ audience.
In this final stage the
printing company will
have finished printing
and will pack away the
magazines and send
them to a warehouse,
and from the warehouse
they get distributed and
sold to the public and
this is the point where
the public get access to
all of the new content
and can catch up an all
of the news on their
favorite artists.
In this final stage the
printing company will
have finished printing
and will pack away the
magazines and send
them to a warehouse,
and from the warehouse
they get distributed and
sold to the public and
this is the point where
the public get access to
all of the new content
and can catch up an all
of the news on their
favorite artists.
Complete: (9/1/17-
10/1/17) (Monday –
Tuesday)
Complete: (9/1/17-
10/1/17) (Monday –
Tuesday)
Complete: (11/1/17)
(Wednesday)
Complete: (12/1/17-
13/1/17) (Thursday-
Friday)
Complete: (12/1/17-
13/1/17) (Thursday-
Friday)
Complete: (14/1/17 –
16/1/17) (Saturday-
Monday)
Complete: (14/1/17 –
16/1/17) (Saturday-
Monday)
Production Process/ Plan
49. Step By Step Guide: Front Covers
First of all we had to open up a new Photoshop Document, and use the ‘International Paper’ template. Once this had opened
and was all set up with a white background (In order to add a gradient color to the background and then edit the image out),
we had to wait for the document to open and load, once this had happened we were able to place in Guide Lines using the
‘Ruler’ tool. This was done by clicking ‘cmd+R’ together in order to bring the ruler guides up at the sides of the document.
Then, we had to start off by finding the barcode and social
media icons and placing them in. The barcode didn’t need
editing at all so all we had to do was find a place similar to our
Front Cover of inspiration and place it in the same area. We
then had to edit the social media icons in order to make them
unique and to match the color scheme/ theme of our
magazine. I made mine all red and white as the majority of my
background was a darker grey going into a lighter grey or
black and white. Further on we had to place the price, date of
the issue and the website link for the magazine, as seen
below, and finally we had to place a much smaller thumbnail
size image of our magazine logo underneath the Barcode and
Social Media.
50. Step By Step Guide: Front Covers
Continued
Next, when looking at the text, so for example the Masthead, Cover Lines, Strapline and Main Heading along with subheadings
and adverts, generally it involved me using the ‘Ruler’ tool once again to create specific margins in order to know where
exactly to place all of the text and where it would go, but also to get the correct spacing through all of them in order to make
the magazine look professionally made. Once I had placed the correct guide lines on the document, I was able to then create
text boxes in the specific regions and then identify almost a layout that would help me figure out where everything would go. I
did this using the ‘Text’ tool on the bottom of the tool bar, on the left-hand side of Photoshop. Once I had selected the correct
regions and marked them out by creating the text boxes in them, and deciding the layout of where all of the specific text would
go (Based of the Magazine of Inspiration), I had to download all of the necessary fonts from Dafont.com and then install them
on my computer. Then I was able to use them in Photoshop and create the desired look for my font without having to crop out
any backgrounds, I was simply able to get on with editing the Color and Stroke of each of the text, so for example the Stroke
and Color on the main heading of “Yung. Doxx” and then the same text style and font for the advertisement at the left-hand
side base of the front cover.
51. Step By Step Guide: Front Covers
Continued
Finally, when looking at editing the image and making it look crisp, clean and professional, I had to simply edit the background
out of it using the ‘Quick Selection’ tool in Photoshop and then use the ‘Eraser’ tool, on the soft setting in order to clean up
the edges that were rough or still had parts of the background in them. This ensured that the image, once it had no
background, looked crisp and professional as the image of Billy (Yung. Doxx) was just the image itself with a gradient
background, and so making it look more professional and more like the Magazine of Inspiration. In order to get the image to
the correct size and without it pixilating or warping I had to hold down SHIFT whilst dragging and resizing from either of the
top corners (left or right) and ensuring it covered the majority of the page when looking to press enter after using the
‘Transform’ tool. Once the whole document was complete and fully edited to standards we were happy with, we had a final
product that looked something like this:
54. Chosen/ Favourite Magazine
I have chosen this magazine to be my final choice
because of the color scheme and the way in
which it is presented as whole. Generally, the
name has more of a meaning than 313 which is
the name of the second magazine, and I feel it
appeals more to the reader due to the way in
which, at the moment, the way that the music
business is going, people are looking ahead into
the next load of people and artists that are
coming up, so this magazine would be more
relevant to them, and so would sell more copies
and bring in more profits for the business, which
would further allow us to create partnerships
with much bigger companies and newer and
bigger artists that are new or coming up in the
music industry.
55. Step By Step Guide: DPS
When looking at the initial stage of creating our Double Page Spreads, we had to use another Adobe application called Adobe InDesign, as this
offered us more experimentation and freedom with creating our DPS effectively and having it look professional too. In order to do this we set
up both pages with a template that allowed us to have 3 columns set on each side with green lines. We then used the ‘Text’ tool, by pressing
‘T’ on our keyboard, and we then drew text boxes from each side of the 3 columns to fit well and have the text centralized, so the template was
almost a guideline for us. Once the 3 text boxes had been placed inside of the 3 template columns we could place in the text from the ‘Draft
Interview’ with our artists and resize or recolor the text in order for it to fit with the color scheme of our magazine and the theme of the whole
DPS. This can be repeated in selected areas for the ‘Credits’ and the ‘Page Number’ along with the ‘Website Link’ texts at the bottom corners
of the double pages.
Once we had selected our preferred color scheme we were able to start putting in the image we were going to use, the background colors or
images hat we wanted in the DPS for either side, or both sides, and then start to put in things such as the ‘Drop Capital’ of the interview and
the ‘Stand First’, which is the introductory paragraph which presents the reader with a little information or the artist and what the interview
will be about.
56. Step By Step Guide: DPS Continued
When looking to place in images such as the social media icons, background and main image or any other images needed, from Photoshop or
any other image in your files and place it into InDesign, you have to ensure that the image is in a JPEG format and then once you have found
the file, simply click and drag it into the page where you wish to place it, then holding Shift, resize the image to fit the page or to make it to the
correct size and then let go of the ‘Left Click’ on your mouse and then Shift, if you let go of shift first then the image will warp and become a
much different shape.
Next, in order to place in the ‘Stand First’ into the DPS, you would have to find an appropriate space for it to go where it would fit along with
the ‘Drop Capital’, and then once you have decided this space, click ‘T’ on your keyboard again to bring the ‘Text Tool’ up again and draw out
the text box where you wish to place the ‘Stand First’. Once you have done this, you can place in the text and edit it in the same way you did
with the first 3 Interview Columns.
Then, in order to place in the ‘Title’ or ‘Heading’ into the DPS at the top of the page or wherever is suitable for your design/ theme, you would
need to ensure that you have the desired font or the same font that you used for your artist on the Front Cover you previously would have
made. Make the heading simple and bold, almost make it stand out from the rest of the text and ensure that it is clear and not in the way or
mixed with any other text or content of the DPS. In order to put it in, find another appropriate spot, use the ‘Text Tool’ again by pressing ‘T’ on
your keyboard, and then typing in the Title or Heading, and editing the color or size etc.
57. Conclusion
In Conclusion, we can see in this learning objective what it takes to make a magazine to a high
standard. That involved going through all the pre production material such as the graphic
layouts and the hand drawn drafts which helped guide us and give us an idea as to how to lay
out and display our media product, including the Front Cover and the Double Page Spread. We
then looked at the whole production process and the production plan of the magazine and
how it would be assembled, edited and when. We also looked at exactly how all of the
equipment would be set up and used throughout the whole production of the magazine
including the photo-shoot. Finally, we looked at step by step how each of the Double Page
Spreads were made on InDesign and then the Front Covers of both magazines on Photoshop.
58.
59. Content
1. Deadlines
2. Post Production Skills
3. Safe Working Practices
4. Proof Reading and Sub-Editing
5. Color
6. Font
7. Conclusion
8. Witness Statement
60. Deadlines
The deadline I had set for my magazine to be fully edited and
published was the 14th of January which was a Sunday, and I met
that deadline as I wanted to publish and get the magazine out to
the public for the Monday which was the 15th of January,
therefore giving everyone a good amount of new material and
news for the new year in which they can expect to see new
music, artists and content, hence they say ‘New Year, New
Music’.
61. Post Production Skills/ Safe Working
Practices
First of all we had to open up a new Photoshop Document, and use the ‘International Paper’ template. Once this had opened
and was all set up with a white background (In order to add a gradient color to the background and then edit the image out),
we had to wait for the document to open and load, once this had happened we were able to place in Guide Lines using the
‘Ruler’ tool. This was done by clicking ‘cmd+R’ together in order to bring the ruler guides up at the sides of the document.
Then, we had to start off by finding the barcode and social
media icons and placing them in. The barcode didn’t need
editing at all so all we had to do was find a place similar to our
Front Cover of inspiration and place it in the same area. We
then had to edit the social media icons in order to make them
unique and to match the color scheme/ theme of our
magazine. I made mine all red and white as the majority of my
background was a darker grey going into a lighter grey or
black and white. Further on we had to place the price, date of
the issue and the website link for the magazine, as seen
below, and finally we had to place a much smaller thumbnail
size image of our magazine logo underneath the Barcode and
Social Media.
62. Post Production Skills/ Safe Working
Practices
Next, when looking at the text, so for example the Masthead, Cover Lines, Strapline and Main Heading along with subheadings
and adverts, generally it involved me using the ‘Ruler’ tool once again to create specific margins in order to know where
exactly to place all of the text and where it would go, but also to get the correct spacing through all of them in order to make
the magazine look professionally made. Once I had placed the correct guide lines on the document, I was able to then create
text boxes in the specific regions and then identify almost a layout that would help me figure out where everything would go. I
did this using the ‘Text’ tool on the bottom of the tool bar, on the left-hand side of Photoshop. Once I had selected the correct
regions and marked them out by creating the text boxes in them, and deciding the layout of where all of the specific text would
go (Based of the Magazine of Inspiration), I had to download all of the necessary fonts from Dafont.com and then install them
on my computer. Then I was able to use them in Photoshop and create the desired look for my font without having to crop out
any backgrounds, I was simply able to get on with editing the Color and Stroke of each of the text, so for example the Stroke
and Color on the main heading of “Yung. Doxx” and then the same text style and font for the advertisement at the left-hand
side base of the front cover.
63. Post Production Skills/ Safe Working
Practices
Finally, when looking at editing the image and making it look crisp, clean and professional, I had to simply edit the background
out of it using the ‘Quick Selection’ tool in Photoshop and then use the ‘Eraser’ tool, on the soft setting in order to clean up
the edges that were rough or still had parts of the background in them. This ensured that the image, once it had no
background, looked crisp and professional as the image of Billy (Yung. Doxx) was just the image itself with a gradient
background, and so making it look more professional and more like the Magazine of Inspiration. In order to get the image to
the correct size and without it pixilating or warping I had to hold down SHIFT whilst dragging and resizing from either of the
top corners (left or right) and ensuring it covered the majority of the page when looking to press enter after using the
‘Transform’ tool. Once the whole document was complete and fully edited to standards we were happy with, we had a final
product that looked something like this:
64. Proof Reading and Sub-Editing
In order to get all of the content on my Double Page Spreads correct and not have any silly
mistakes or amateur errors, I typed up all of the content on Microsoft Word which allowed me
to ensure that none of the content had silly mistakes due to Word’s Spell Check function. This
ensured that I had no spelling mistakes in the content, therefore ensuring that I only had to
proof read it and then make sure that it was all laid out the way I wanted it to be in the final
print. This is the part where we ensure that all of the content is relevant, usable and can all fit
into the Double Page Spread. I later found that I had made no mistakes and all of the content
was correct with no spelling errors, therefore allowing me to go ahead and print my final
magazine Double Page Spreads and the Front Cover to go with them.
65. House Style
Color Scheme: The magazine would consist of a color scheme that has the colors of Red, White and Black on it, as this would
convey the use of the general Hip-Hop and Rap theme color scheme that can be seen in most of the album covers of artists, on
the previous moodboard slides. This specific color scheme seems to be very popular within the use of the album covers and
also sever magazine styles such as XXL’s and Vibe’s themes that they follow throughout their magazines. So by following this
specified color scheme I would be looking at focusing on the same sort of target audience and so attracting more readers to
read my magazine and the content inside it which would be relevant to their favorite artists and genres of music.
Font Style: From these two selections of fonts for each magazine, “NXT EP” and “313”, I will be choosing one of each font that I
would like to, or prefer to use in my final magazine front cover and double page spread (DPS). From the two rows above, I have
chosen, the “American Captain” font for “NXT EP”, as this has clean, cut edges that will bring that almost harsh connotation
towards the magazine and almost describe what sort of content will be found inside. Next for “313” I have chosen to use the
“Funk Machine” font, due to its curvature and the sort of ‘old’ style it has to it, which would be relevant to the connotations
behind ‘313’, as it is Detroit’s area code, and Detroit is quite an old and run down city, therefore showing its age and relevance
to its meaning.
Social Media: In order to achieve good publicity for the magazine and get a name that is well known for it, an app will be
developed for it over time, further we will create a Snapchat, Instagram, Facebook and YouTube account in which all the most
recent content will be released on as well as news and stories on artists that are high in-demand at the moment. This will
ensure that our customers will be able to keep up with news from their favorite artists before the newest issue of the magazine
comes out, and so they can look ahead into finding out more when the full magazine issue is released and that story is
mentioned in it.
67. Witness Statement
Below is my Witness Statement, that was completed during the time of my Presentation for the Pitch of my magazine. Through
this, I can see any modifications/ improvements I need to complete in order to amend my work and make it better than it
already is. It also goes through the strengths and weaknesses of my pitch, what I did well and what I could have done better in
order to pitch my magazine better and ‘sell’ it to my peers for what it is worth.
68. Conclusion
In conclusion from this Learning Objective, we have gone through the final stages of
manufacturing and creating the final versions of the magazine, through deciding deadlines and
going through final choices. It also went through all of the safety procedures of the magazine,
in terms of editing and finalizing the magazine before it has been published. We also looked at
the proof reading and sub-editing stages of the magazine which would ensure that the
magazine could be published on time with no silly mistakes or grammatical errors in the
content, but most importantly no editing mistakes in the images or visual content of the
magazine such as the Front Cover and main Double Page Spread. We further looked into the
fonts, colours and deadlines of the magazine, which would all ensure that the magazine looked
as professional as possible and to the highest quality standard that it possibly could be at,
whilst also ensuring that the magazine met its deadlines, from the editorial stages, written
content stages and the final production stages, through to the publishing date, which is when
the public would get their hands on this new magazine content and manage to read up on
their favourite artists and the latest news on them.