Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Cover Types

Early Magazine were most words on the front cover and there weren't that many pictures on the front, as there would be now days.There usually made of paper which usually tore very easily which didn't help them last very long.
The Post Cover is less words and more picture to get  the reader to buy or look into this magazine.The Pictures is just one big picture and not as many captions as an regular magazine.
Pictures Made to Married are the magazines were you see the very pretty women , and they are usually the magazines that people fall in love with and really like it.
In he Forst Of Word

Monday, February 4, 2013

Blog#3 Fav Cover




Finalist
Texas Monthly, Dec. 2011: "Breakfast!"
(Photograph by Randal Ford)
No matter if you call them "griddle cakes," "flapjacks," or "pancakes," they all mean the same thing: "delicious!" How could we not feature the most important meal of the day on our cover? This stack of Pecan Praline Griddle Cakes from Maxine's on Main, in Bastrop, Texas, fit the bill of being a perfect breakfast, with a wink and a nudge to Texas in a well-shaped pat of butter. Photographer Randal Ford and food stylist Paige Erin Fletcher went out to Maxine's to work their magic and came back with a mouthwatering image and full stomachs.
 Favorite



 I like this cover cause it was a lot of bacon and pancakes, and that's two of my favorite foods.
The cover also is like an big advertisement to all those in texas showing this place has some of the best food in the state. The colorfulness of the pancakes brings out the color on the bacon & Pancakes and it makes them look extremely better.I also noticed the Texas butter symbol on the pancakes that brings out the picture most people see that first out of all things.

Blog#2

1.The Cover.
2.Lots of captions of the cover to rill people in.
3.The color of the backround.
4.The Design.
5.Make sure the captions deliver a message.

Best Cover

1.New York, Oct. 3, 2011: "Is She Just Too Old for This?"InFormal
2.Bloomberg Businessweek, Oct. 10-16, 2011 "Steve Jobs 1955-2011" InFormal
3.People, May 16, 2011: "William & Catherine: Love Reigns!" Formal
4.PEOPLE, April 11, 2011: "Elizabeth Taylor: Farewell to a Legend"formal
5.Sports Illustrated, Winter 2011: "Swimsuit 2011"Environmental/Formal
6.ESPN The Magazine, Oct. 17, 2011: "The Body Issue: Hope Solo"Environmental/Formal
7.Martha Stewart Living, Dec. 2011: "Make It a Magical Holiday" Environmental
8.GQ, Aug. 2011: "Mila Kunis" Formal
9.Parade, July 3, 2011: "Grill, Baby, Grill"Formal
10.GQ, Jan. 2011: "Ryan Gosling"Formal
11.American Photo, Sept./Oct. 2011: "09.11.01" Environmetal
12.Vanity Fair, July 2011: "Prince William and Kate"Informal
13.Parade, July 31, 2011: "Cats vs. Dogs"Informal
14.National Geographic, May 2011: "Above Yosemite"Environmetal
15.Sports Illustrated, July 25, 2011:"Hope Solo"Informal
16.EOPLE, Sept. 12, 2011: "The Children of 9/11"Formal
17. OnEarth, March 2011: "Arctic Fever"Environmetal

Blog #1

1.Make sure the cover stands out.
2.Use every color, "especially yellow"
3.Coverlines , lots of lots of them.
4. Efficient, fast, easy to scan (that’s showing off the service)
5.Do it deliberately, strongly, with conviction. The great thing about seeing the sketch cover in its realistic setting is that it warns you away from itsy-bitsy decisions that don’t matter. To succeed out there, you have to realize that you are making a poster, albeit in miniature. A billboard.

Green , Triangle , Backpack

Green..

 Backpack.