Wednesday, 1 November 2023

Magazine Terminology 💡🗃️

Here's the magazine terminology that our teacher introduce at the beginning of Media Studies Class




Reflection: On the first - second week of Term 2 of Media Class, I remember that we're going to start our magazine project. Personally, I am not the type of a person to read, especially magazine in my freetime, so I don't really have a clue about what an ideal "magazine" looks like in the market. As the week gets progressively longer, These are the crucial elements that build up what we called today as a magazine. Now that I've discovered parts that compose a complete magazine, I can't wait to actually design my own cover page and double page spread sheets. 

MastheadThe name of the magazine, in its typical font, on the cover.
Selling lineThe short description of the ‘identity’ of the magazine under the masthead,
Main imageThe image which fills the cover – a model, celebrity, animal, artefact.
Coverlines‘Teasers’ for the contents of the magazine on the cover.
Typography/fontThe shape, style, size and colour of the letters used.
Drop capThe enlarged initial letter of the first word of an article – an aesthetic feature which is designed to engage the reader.
Pull quotesEnlarged quotes from an article – these may be included in coverlines, but are also used in the body of the article to break up the page and to attract the attention of the reader.
BylineThe name of the writer of the article, usually found at the beginning. Simply, it is the ‘line’ which tells you who the article is by.
Main cover lineThe most important article featured, grabs the audience’s attention (featured article)
Mode of addressThe way the magazine/article addresses the audience. Formal, casual, direct (for images too)
BarcodeUsed for retailers
SkylineA list of keywords featured at the top of the cover
ThirdsThe upper and left third are the most important. why?
PropAn image of an item
Puff / BoxoutA smaller image/text to stand out from the rest of the information (puff=circle. boxout=square)
BuzzwordsExclusive, free, new, special edition
BannerA block of colour with info inside, usually stretches the width of the cover
CaptionInformation about an image.
SpreadPages of a magazine that should be viewed together (usually two)
BorderEmpty space around the edges
White spaceEmpty space in the spread, used to break up the content (negative space)

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