Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Magazine cover draft

 
 
 
 
A. Magazine name (masthead or flag)
What Day Is It
B. A teaser / cover line 
Over 80% of Juniors are signing up for AP napping

C. If you choose to make a "picture married to type" or a "forrest of words" type cover, create the following:
At least two teasers (Cover lines)  Cover Line with the primary using a larger point size.
A. New English teacher realizes students will believe anything he says
B. Students banned from eye contact - after recent PDA reinforcements, AISD has finally cracked down on casual acknowledgement.
D. Pricing and date information.
$60
November 05 1955



E. Inserting a bar code - Create another small photo box in InDesign and place a barcode that you download from Google Image. The dimensions should be realistic for a magazine cover. You should figure this out yourself, but it should be at least 10 picas tall.

Magazine Coves

I. Early Magazine Covers

NAME OF MAGAZINE   Peterson's women's magazine
YEAR OF PUBLICATION  1872
MAIN ATTRIBUTES  Cover line uses a completely generic cover richly decorated with the leafy symmetry of Victorian embellishments, with a lovely assemblage of drawings at the bottom symbolizing the various roles of woman in the family.

II. The Poster Cover:
Pictures That Need No Words

NAME OF MAGAZINE  Rolling Stone
YEAR OF PUBLICATION  January 2001
MAIN ATTRIBUTES  The result is a rare example of a pure poster cover without a cover line of any kind.

III. Pictures Married to Type

 
 NAME OF MAGAZINE  Cosmopolitan
YEAR OF PUBLICATION 1940's -1950's
MAIN ATTRIBUTES shows how far a designer could go without becoming mired in the complexities of color separations and trappings.

IV. In the Forest of Words

 
NAME OF MAGAZINE   Vanity Fair
YEAR OF PUBLICATION January 1, 2001
MAIN ATTRIBUTES It is tempting to speculate that these covers reflect the larger culture