Annotated magazine front cover













 



 Key Words- 

Advertorial
Advertising material that is designed to look like editorial. 
In the UK, this is covered by a BSME code of practice and must be labelled as 'advertising promotion'
Audience
The people that you want to reach.
Bleed
Printed matter that extends beyond the trimmed edge of a page. 
The bleed area is usually 3mm beyond the trimmed size of a page
Body copy
main text on a page
Byline
The headline and text of a second less important story in a magazine or paper.
Classified advertising
Advertising sold by the line or column centimetre (as opposed to display advertising). 
Adverts grouped according to content.
Caption/anchorage
An explanation of a photo or diagram.
Coverline
Gives more information about the headline and article – used to make you read on.
Cover mount
A gift stuck to a magazine's front cover
Display advertising
Large adverts, usually sold in multiples of quarter to full page
Editorial
An opinion from a publisher or editor about a topic of interest
Feature Article
The main article advertised on a front cover of a magazine, or the main article in a spread.
Font
A set of type characters, numbers and punctuation marks, in one face and size.
Gutter
Gap between columns of text or around the text area of a page.
Graphic feature
Use of graphics to enhance the look – boxes, borders, shapes etc.
Header
Information line at the top of a page.

Headline
A headline is text at the top of a newspaper article, indicating the nature of the article below it.
Lead
Beginning of a news story, generally contains who, what, when, where, and why
Main picture
The biggest and most eye catching picture – often linked to the feature article.

Masthead
The name of a publication traditionally printed at the top of the first editorial page, often as a logo and often accompanied by issue number and date
Puff or starburst
Attention-grabbing panel, so-called because originally words put on star-shaped background.
Puff piece
A flattering piece of copy about a person, usually very biased
Pug
Top part/"ears" of newspaper at the top left and right-hand corners of the paper (aka "ears" of the page). Can contain the price of the paper, a logo or a promotion.
Pull quote
Phrase or sentence taken from an article and used to attract a reader's attention by setting it in a larger type size
Sidebar
Short article related to main topic on page, usually in a box or given a special typographical treatment
Strapline
A thin band across the bottom of a magazine front cover previewing what is inside.
Skyline
The same as a strapline, but at the top!

Comments

  1. You need to upload the terminology table with this post. The key terms are extremely important and it's vital that you know them; especially for the exam unit too.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular Posts