Monday, 18 November 2013

Class task


Class task: in writing compare and contrast these two cover images, focus on the use of photography.
Consider the Rule of the thirds, lines and angles colour and focal points.
The rule of the thirds has been taken on in different ways in both images, The source has taken a centre approach having games face in the middle third taking all the attention, leaving the left and right third for space for writing, whereas Vanity fair takes the whole middle and right thirds for Lady GaGa's body and pose, leaving only the left third for writing. Both images leave the top third almost empty for the title to be positioned in, only taken up by the very top of both Game and GaGas head, the middle third is mostly filled with image, and the bottom third filled completely by the bottom of the image, Games shoulders take up the complete bottom third just as GaGas legs do.

The photography used for vanity air, having Lady GaGa's body take the whole right third would usually mean that there is not any room for puffs and plugs, but because of the lighting making her body look very much like a black background makes the writing be able to stand out on her, the light is directly on her face drawing you straight into her eyes and hand gesture in Vanity fair, opposing to The sources lighting shining down on Game, who is pointing a well lit gun to his chin, the lighting facing down makes you follow a movement from his face down to the gun, which is almost the eye contact of the photo as Game has his eyes shut, so unlike Lady GaGa's flirty eye contact the gun is the main thing pulling you to the image.

The angles on both make the follow a curtain route of where exactly you will look, in The source the centre 180 degree image draws you to look from top to bottom following the light and story, you first look at his scrunched up face showing agony and fear, you then look down to see the gun, showing its a way out, the way the image is presented makes you know Game is holding the gun there.
Where as lady GaGa placed on the right side of the image with an elegant right angle shape to her body, with her face looking down on the audience showing her elegant and upright position is to say she is higher up than they are, and that she is comfortable to admit that.

Music research

For part of my resaerch i did a survey between friends and peers around me on what music genres they preferred, here is a survey of my results.

I also asked the first 10 teens around me what; out of the most popular magazines found would they tend to read at their age, my results consisted of this:
With these surveys i tried my hardest to not get bias results, but asking people the same age from the same sort of area will make my results a bit bias.

Thursday, 14 November 2013

Music magazine research

Music magazine reaserch


Average music magazine sales and year on year change.

·        Mojo: 79,345, down 6.8%


·      
 
 
 
 
 

 
 
         Top of the pops: 75,398, down 7.3%

·      
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
       Q: 58,980, down 8.7%

·       
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
        We heart pop: 58,702 down 8.5%

·       
 
 
 
 
 
 


 
       Uncut: 56,894, down 9.7%

·     
 
 
 
 
 
 

 
        Kerrang: 37,603, down 6.5%

Sunday, 10 November 2013

Contents draft

Secondly for my preliminary task i have created a rough contents page for my magazine "Y.E.S" following the design of the fron cover

Front cover

I have successfully created a cover for my college magazine "College Crunch" and this is the final piece for it: 
I have stuck with the colour scheme and the ideas for stories, i changed the design a little to fit around my photo and to have more realistic magazine look to it, i have also added in the southdowns logo as i think it is more effective.

flat plans

I am aiming my magazine at college students that are willing to try new things, take an interest in things they have never tried and are open to enjoy college activities. All ages and genders are accepted, I want to make my magazine unisex and very public.
The typical content of my magazine will be getting students to endure in different events around the college.
I have chosen the title Y.e.s (young evolving social) because it is different and has a slogan, it is less boring than just plain, one meaning title. I rejected the names, SDC, because the name sound a little inappropriate and short, and College mag, because it was too much of an obvious name.
Ideas for cover lines I decided ‘NEW BUSSES! – Has first bus service finally improved?’ ‘DON’T MISS! – Exciting new events this year.’ ‘ALL NEW! – College website design and how it works.’ ‘THIS YEAR! – 2013 A level results’
For ‘Y.E.S’ I want to use a formal looking serif font in white on a black background, for the rest of the text I want a san serif font that still looks formal.
I want the magazine to be weekly, one magazine from Monday to Friday all year round, showing new college activities and events every week. So all seasons of the year!
I want my front image to be a student looking very happy to be in college enjoying some sort of activity, e.g sitting at a computer, reading a book, doing a sport, I will ask my friends to pose for this image.
My magazine would be around A5 in size making it not too much hassle for student to pick up and take away with them, as many students already have bags full of A4 books, and another would just add to the bother so I feel it would be ignored.
For my contents page I want to carry on the colour scheme of my front cover, adding images of students enjoying each other’s company, and trips and activities.




Map of initial ideas

Monday, 21 October 2013

Essay

In this essay I will be talking about the influence magazines have on teenage girls by looking at 5 different episodes of ‘Seventeen’ magazine and the codes and conventions that make young girls change their looks and actions.
The main image on each cover is a young woman celebrity who is seen as ‘perfect’ smiling and looking straight at their target audience, young teenage girls. As if to entice them into buying the magazine; most photos in magazines are altered so that wrinkles, fat, and pores disappear. Readers only see perfect and unrealistic bodies represented, having a person who is the image of perfect makes young girls want to buy the magazine to look through and be influenced by their looks and almost copy them. This is a type of insecurity that magazines cause in young vulnerable teenagers, they publish relationship facts, make-up tips and hair tips to lure the teens into trying these themselves

using ‘pretty’ on all five magazines makes girls feel paranoid and self-doubting on whether they look the right way, they desire for the skinny, shrunken look and diet and a large proportion get anorexic. They worry about a bad hair day and want to miss school if they even have a tiny spec of a zit on their face.

Four out of five of the magazines have articles about ‘best’ body, but or flat abs these articles often include information on how get "perfect" ab muscles, advice on how to apply makeup, and tips on what to wear that will make your body look good, Teen magazines are a way for a teenager to find news about the newest fashion trend. Advertisers, marketers and designers know that fashion is very important to most teens, so magazines are a very profitable way to persuade teens to purchase a particular fashion product magazines often include ads for beauty and hair products, clothing and perfume. Many of these ads feature women that are underweight ‘the best spring cloths’ ‘the cutest clothes’ ‘ultimate beauty guide’ ‘perfect hair and ‘party hair’ all five sub headings telling teens how they need to change making teens feel they are not right because they are not what everyone else looks up to making their lack of confidence fall more and more every time they read a magazine When people are unhappy with their bodies, it can lead to depression, anxiety, or even eating disorders.
Each magazine has the colour pink in, because pink is stereotypically a ‘girly’ colour making girls feel they have to be girly in order to purchase this magazine making teenage girls feel as though they will not be accepted if they do not follow these rules causing them to be ashamed of their indifferences and individuality; and making them follow a code, be girly, be pretty, wear this, don’t wear that, magazines are a guide on how teenagers live their lives and most don’t even know that it’s happening because it is such a discrete way of controlling them.

Thursday, 17 October 2013

New magazine cover analasys.

There are no adverts on the front cover to maximise room for more story teasers and gossip.
The bar code is at the bottom on the left of the cover so that it’s out of the way of the stories.
The main colours of ‘heat’ magazine are red, white and black. The red text implies urgency, and stands out against the white background, so does the black. These colours are used because they are simple and effective, someone looking at magazines in a shop would immediately be drawn to the large amount of red used on the cover of this.
The main cover image is a picture of Victoria Beckham to draw in attention because everyone knows who she is so they may be interested in stories and gossip about her life. This draws the reader to buy the magazine.
The price is £1.65, and is positioned between the masthead and strapline. This makes it visible but discreet and not distracting from the rest of the front cover. The date is placed alongside the price, so that it too doesn’t distract from the rest of the front cover. There is only one feature article photograph on the cover of this issue of heat, making it appear less cluttered so the main headline stands out further, and shows how important it is. Clearly the stories presented in this issue are bigger than usual, as heat is usually cluttered. There are 3 fonts used on the whole cover – one is for the main headline, and has the biggest size. This distinguishes that it goes with the biggest picture, and that it is the main headline. The second is for the slightly less important information, but you can tell that it is still important because it’s written in capitals. Putting the words in capitals makes them stand out and look important, as if the magazine is shouting to you because something is so shocking. The last font used is that for the masthead. The masthead is not in capitals which tells you that the magazine is informal and friendly, and gives a general idea of how the information will be shown throughout. It is written in red, making it vibrant and making it stand out, red can mean romance or love, which heat has a lot to do with, e.g. gossip on celebrity relationships.
The strapline ‘This week’s hottest celebrity news’ clearly indicates the genre (gossip) and content of the magazine, so you don’t need to flick through it to see if you’d be interested.
Heat magazine is issued once a week, making £1.65 fairly expensive for a weekly magazine, however it isn’t essential that you buy each one and is cheaper if you subscribe. It also means that the news in it is fairly up to date, so you know what’s happening as soon as it happens.
A puff covers the bottom half of the article photograph. The purpose of this is to explain in short what the article inside will be about, and draw in buyers.
The teaser at the bottom of the front cover tempts people to buy the magazine with ‘THE BRAND NEW MAGAZINE EVERYONE’S TALKING ABOUT’. Free magazines and other items inside make it seem a better deal for the price, which makes you more likely to buy the magazine.

Monday, 30 September 2013

IPC media.
With more than 60 iconic media brands, IPC creates content for multiple platforms, across print, online, mobile, tablets and events.  As the UK's leading consumer magazine publisher we engage with 26m UK adults - almost two thirds of UK women and 42% of UK men. Our award winning portfolio of websites reaches over 25 million users globally every month.
IPC Media is committed to working in partnership with its consumers, advertisers, business partners and employees to deliver exceptional value, service, innovation and creativity.
Pinpointing exactly how far IPC's roots stretch back into the midst of publishing history is a complicated business. The International Publishing Corporation Ltd was formed in 1963 following the merger of the UK's three leading magazine publishers - George Newnes, Odhams Press and Fleetway Publications - who came together with the Mirror Group to form the International Publishing Corporation (IPC). And IPC Magazines was created five years later, in 1968. But those three original magazine businesses each had their own illustrious history, having been established in 1881, 1890 and 1880 respectively, with a number of the titles they launched in the late 19th Century still being published today under the IPC umbrella. And when The Field, launched in 1853, joined the IPC stable in 1994 following the acquisition of Harmsworth Magazines, it saw our family tree reach back even further.



IPC media had a division on Celebrity and Fashion aimed at woman of many ages

Lifestyle - Woman and Woman's Own lead the general interest women's weekly sector.

Traditional – ‘woman’s weekly’ says in the name its aimed at women, Packed full of inspiring, helpful and useful ideas and information for women who are the heart of their homes and families, it offers a unique mix of practical, compelling and up-to-the minute content. 

Real life ‘pick me up’ showing stories of peoples real life stories and disasters

All aimed at women over 30, or typical housewives.

IPC could be the an appropriate publisher for a new music magazine because it has a well-known background of successful magazines and is published on line and printed making it more wide spread across the UK.

I feel IPC would go for a pop magazine as pop is seen as a more girly genre of music and a lot of their magazines are aimed at women and girls

Bauer media might be more appropriate for a music magazine as it is more, modern, with their slogan being ‘we think popular’ considering music magazines are typically aimed at a younger era a newer more modern approach may work better. 


Thursday, 26 September 2013

Glossary of terms (Magazines)

Distributor: A company that warehouses and ships books or magazines to retail outlets. 

Double-sided: Printing on both sides of a sheet of paper.

Footer: A headline title or other special text that appears at the bottom of a page. 

Format (noun): The size, style, number of pages, and other printing requirements of a piece to be printed. 

Format (verb): To apply and style font to raw copy in a layout. 

Gutter: The inner margins of two facing pages or columns in a publication.

Header:
A headline or title that appears at the top of a page.

Headline:

The display-size text, usually placed at the top of an article or advertisement, that summarizes the message or acts as an attention-getter.

Layout (noun):The compilation of text and graphics on a page.

Layout (verb):The task of arranging art, text and other graphic elements on a page. See also "design."

Mockup:
A visual presentation of a design or page layout that approximates what the final printed piece might look like.


Page layout:
The assembly of the elements on a page, including text and graphics. Also called page composition or page makeup.


Airbrush (verb):
To retouch photographic images with dye sprayed from a small, high-pressure gun (also known as an airbrush, noun). Similar retouching can be performed digitally with the use of image-manipulation software.


bar code:
A series of vertical lines that identify the magazine, the magazine's publisher, and the magazine's price.


blow up (verb):
To enlarge an image, either photographically or digitally.

Monday, 23 September 2013

Things you can do using blogger

  • Can write what you want when you want
  • Earn money
  • Post work
  • Host blog for free
  • Add photos, videos, links and emails
  • Can customise your design

How it will be useful for my coursework
  • Easy to use
  • Teacher can view it as often as they like, and add comments for feedback
  • Access where ever you are using the internet.
  • Storage, no folder retrievable
  • Digital