Monday, 30 January 2012

Reserching exisitng magazines which have coverage of gigs and festivals.

After delivering my pitch and gethering feed back, I decided to reserch magazines that had coverage of gigs and music festivals. Because it's going to be a important aspect of my own music magazine. When reserching I found more websites had coverage than actual magazines but the more mainstream music magazines including 'NME' and 'Q' also advertised and recommended gigs/ festivals. I came across a helpful website when reserching called 'TimeOut London' which has great links and I will definitely be using the website along with 'NME'/'Q' magazine for help/inspriation when creating my music magazine.
                     



Audience Profile

Jordan is a 19 year old aspiring musician that lives in the heart of London, he works part time in a well known street wear store 'size?' he frequently attends local gigs with his friends around the area he lives. And every year takes the time two visit two of his favourite music festival Benicassim and Glastonbury. Jordan  has a particular interest in bands not widely heard of, yet he also likes the more mainstream artists that fit in to the 'indie/alternative' genre. He also has a keen interest in fashion and art after studying them both at A-level. He enjoys going to see up and coming bands that advertise in his favourite music shop and takes inspiration from their styles. He is a very outgoing individual that dosen't like to follow the crowd. Since he can remeber with the spare money he has he has been buying music magazines that very much focus on the music genre he listens to these include "NME" and "Q" magazines, even though he follows these magazines very closely he would like to have a new magazine that fits into the style he would like perfectly. As "NME" magazine is aimed mainly at men with 73% of it's auidence being male he would spefically like this new up and coming magazine to be aimed more at males in his age range, this being 16-25 year old students with a passion for music, art and fashion. He thinks the price of £3.50- £4.50 a month is acceptable, but he would be prepared to pay slightly more if the magazine came out less regularly, but of course featured more.

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

My Pitch



After delivering my pitch to my class members, I felt it was recived very well. And the feedback was all positive, at this stage I don't feel as though I need to make any changes. But I may feel different after creating a mock up and reserching exisitng magazines which have coverage of gigs and festivals.

Friday, 20 January 2012

Representation Of Social Group Within My Magazine

The social group I am representing in my magazine would be fairly typical for the alternative/ indie music genre, The age range that I am targeting is 16-25 they would particularly have a keen interest in fashion and art. And would frequently attend local gigs/ music festivals. My audience would also be influenced by the fashion of the artist/band featured, as this would be the style that my audience would like/follow. My audience would listen to artists/bands such as Bombay bicycle club, Foals, The Strokes, The Joy Formidable, Arcade Fire, The xx and The Raconteurs. Celebrity examples of this style would include Pixie and Peaches Geldof, Alexa Chung, Nick Grimshaw and Fearne Cotton.Also other various band members and singers.

Font Samples

When looking for a font to use for my magazine masthead i used 'My Fonts','Dafont' and 'Abstract Fonts' I was looking for a bold font that also reflected the name of my magazine 'Dirty Digest', The magazine will be an Indie/ alternative music magazine which will also include Fashion, Events and Art.I found some fonts that were handwritten and thin not appropriate for my magazine instantly I knew they wouldn't be as well recived as well as some of the other fonts. I wanted my font to have a young, edgy and informal feel to it, that wasn't overly complicated. I felt this was achieved in the last nine fonts

Wednesday, 18 January 2012

Reserch for my Music magazine

I like how this image/layout has been put together. I may re-create something similar when taking my own photos and creating my front cover.

 

I've found this website very helpful, the content of the website is similar to the content I would like to advertise in my own magazine.

Tuesday, 17 January 2012

Magazine covers that have caught my eye












I like how this image has been put together, i would like to use/attichive something similar when playing with my own images and putting a final image together for my music magazine.
DPS: Artists/ bands on cover
         New music
         Interview with artists/bands
         Informal
         Question/ Answer
         Use of slang/ can be swearing
         Information- tour dates/ album releases/ festival etc..
        
CONTENTS: Gigs information/ tickets for sale
                       Interviews
                       Reviews
                       New artists
                       Compitions
                      Chart Positions/ top 20
                      Free gifts
PAGES:
150 MONTHLY
50 WEEKLY

Monday, 16 January 2012

Magazine Glossary

Masthead – The name and logo of the magazine.
The Lead – the introductory paragraph of an article. Usually written in bold or capitals.
Body copy - refers to the text of your written articles, which should be produced as a printed presentation to accepted industry standards, e.g. correct use of language, font size, word limits etc. Usually written in columns.
Serif font – fonts like Times New Roman, or Baskerville Old Face, which have little bars (serifs) on the end of the letters.
Sans serif font – fonts like Impact, or Agency FB, which do not have little bars (serifs) on the end of the letters.
Drop Capitals – Really big letter, which start off an article.
Cross Head – Small sub-heading used to split up a large block of text.
White Space – white parts of a page other than text or pictures.
Mode Of Address – How the magazine talks to the audience.
Sell Lines – Text on the cover that helps to sell the magazine to the audience. Kerrang!’s sell line is “life is loud”.
Banners – text, which stands out because its on a coloured background.
House Style – a magazines distinctive design that distinguishes it from its competitors.
Borders – the gaps at the edges of the page.
Gutters – the gaps between the columns of text.
Leading - the space between lines of text.
Kerning - the space between letters.
Strap Lines – a smaller headline, printed above the main headline.
By-lines - name of the person who wrote the article. Picture Credits - where did the photos come from, or who took them.
Anchorage – The way in which text helps to pin down the meaning of a picture and visa versa.

Friday, 13 January 2012

Magazine work for Alevel

One of the most popular coursework tasks at A level is to make all or part of a magazine. For the OCR specification, this involves producing the front cover, contents page and a double page spread from a new music magazine. Usually, the task is done individually. You can work in a group of up to four people, but if you do, you have to produce the equivalent number of editions of the same magazine in a 'house style'. What I cover here is particularly of relevance to the music magazine task, but the ideas could be applied in relation to other types of magazine assignments.

Many centres choose this task because they think it will be easier to manage than video work, which may be the case, because more of the task is 'desk-bound'; this is probably true, but in my experience this task is extremely hard to do well and needs a lot of careful planning, organisation and preparation, as well as the ability to stand back from your work, take criticism and admit when you have got it wrong.

Lots of students do lots of good research for this task, but very few seem to be able to carry that research through to the final production to make something that shows they understand conventions. I think for this task, you need to consider both the magazine as a whole and the three components you have to make. So that means looking at the overall style and conventions of real magazines but also looking closely at the specifics of front covers, contents pages and double page spreads.

You might start with magazines in general and then home in on music magazines more specifically, but you need to end up looking at the sub-genre for the target audience at which you are aiming. It is very easy to get it completely wrong by trying to replicate the conventions of one sub-genre when really your audience belongs to another.

A search through google images for 'music magazine covers' gives you a good range to look at- though be careful, as you can see, some of these have been mis-filed!




The same is true for contents pages and double page spreads, though what you begin to notice is that this search also includes examples of student work, from their A level blogs!





It is really important that you look carefully at all elements of the magazine that you are being asked to produce to ensure that you really understand exactly what the conventions are and why they are there. A good way to do this is to annotate your research material as research evidence. But remember when you come to produce your own, use that annotated model and really look at it, rather than just forgetting it!

Here's a basic annotation of a cover from a student blog



Covers are usually the easiest bit to get right, but you still need to think carefully. Where is your masthead going to be? there's a reason that they tend to be at the top and from the left- that's to do with how the magazine will be displayed in a rack in the shop. If you put it elsewhere on the cover, in effect your logo/branding becomes hard to find. Why do we need a barcode and a price? What's the point of a strapline and how many of the features need to be flagged up for us on that cover? If you look at a few different magazines, certain patterns start to emerge.

Look at the colourscheme and the use of fonts- how many different colours are used on the text and how many different fonts are used? They may be different sizes but they don't vary that much. Look at the picture chosen- usually the model will be looking at the camera and in turn the viewer. Think about how that image has been posed and the probability that many images will have been taken to select from. Then consider the layout of the whole thing. How much can the model overlap the masthead without a loss of identity for the brand?

Contents pages often go wrong, but again a few simple observations will help you a lot.



This edition of Q magazine is quite typical. There is a main picture of a band from one of the lead articles and a smaller one of Nick cave from another section, so a visual sense of some of the variety to be found that month. There is a lso a list of what's in the magazine which extends to at least fifteen examples, with several elements to the 'Oasis Special!'. This gives us a sense of the value for money that we will get from the magazine. Surprisingly often, a student contents page will only feature half a dozen items, but who would pay good money for such a small publication?

Note also the use of colour and font here- it is clean and limited- simple, despite the amount of detail. The whole layout is in columns, with boxes being used to guide the reader's eyes. Your contents page needs to do the same, whatever genre of music you use. There is also repetition of the logo from the cover, smaller, but a reminder to the reader, as well as a link to the magazine's online presence at the top. All this needs to guide your thinking when you make a a magazine.

Finally, the element where most students 'come unstuck' is the double page spread. there may be a lack of clarity as to what this might mean, as some students just seem to see it as an opportunity to make any two random pages from the magazine (I've even seen a horoscope page!). What it should be is a feature article which gives you the opportunity to show what you can do with text, image and layout.

This NME example with Lily Allen is one way of approaching it. Note that the image stretches across the border and the amount of text is limited, with quite a striking use of 'blackmail note' titles.



It is nonetheless, still quite clearly built in columns and the image would again be the result of choosing from a large number taken at a shoot. You might opt for a multi-image approach, but again you need to base it clearly on real examples and to make your text size appropriate. Quite often students choose a font that is much too big, in order to fill the page, which immediately makes their work look like it does not understand conventions. Finally, the text itself needs careful thought and multiple drafts. All writing needs proofreading so that there are no spelling errors! In the real world, you'd get the sack if there were as it would make your magazine a laughing stock!

Throughout the process, you should keep full records of everything you do- all your research, your planning step by step, revisions and drafts. As much visual material as you can gather will hold you in good stead.

Thursday, 12 January 2012

Mood Board

Tuesday, 10 January 2012

School Pre-lim Magazine




When making my magazine I wanted it to have an edgy feel that was aimed at a majorly female teen audience.  The idea of creating a magazine that was based on the fashion/textiles side of the school magazine was my first thought. And this eventually worked well for me when putting my cover/contents pages together. My magazine is aimed at the students of Lutterworth College. I used information that is relevant to students, and headlines that they would be familiar with. Therefore the audience of my magazine would be students or members of Lutterworth College.
I attracted my audience by using catchy headlines, free gifts, and discounts. Also I created a cover that was up to date. And that the audience could relate to. I wanted to use familiar colours and also colours that complimented each other.  I choose a colour pallet of black, white, and deep red. I used the teardrop tool on Photoshop to clone the colour of the models lips to use mainly for my text. As well as using Photoshop when putting my magazine together, I used Dafont to create my text. I decided to choose a text that wasn’t anything to structured or overly bold and that has a fun/young feel to it. I took inspiration from magazines such as Vogue, Teen Vogue, ELLE, Glamour, Nylon, and Marie Claire I found a lot of help from researching and looking at their magazines.
The articles the magazine contains are all addressed to students at Lutterworth College such as ‘Get the scoop’, ‘Apply yourself’ and ‘Canteen’ these are all relevant to students at present. As they are current issues and interests for this particular age groups and audience that I’ve chosen. I’ve also highlighted ‘Your space’ in the magazine this may allow students that don’t really get involved to eventually have a voice about the goings on at the College.
Whilst constructing my magazine, along with the skills that I’ve previously stated. I’ve learnt a wide range of skills via Photoshop, This has allowed me to manipulate and edit my own photos to the standard I would like them to be which would best suit my magazine.