These are the ideas I have for fonts on my magazine. I want
to have a variety of sans serif and serif fonts to go with my mixed house style
that I am planning to use. The sans serif fonts like Hero and Impact look
modern. I tried to include some unique fonts that could be used for my
masthead. As well as fonts like Caution and Charanga that give off the rebellious rock vibe,
Tuesday, 2 December 2014
Colours Moodboard
This is a basic idea of the colours I want to use on my
magazine. They are simple and work well together. The black and white are very
generic colours which mean the red and sepia-like tones will add that splash of
colour to it. I feel that these colours will appeal to my audience as they
aren’t stereotypical colours. They’re all colours that can be associated with a
variety of things.
Advertisers Moodboard
This shows the kinds of advertisers I want in my magazine.
I’ve attempted to aim at younger audiences but also have slightly mature things
like amazon and sky for the older audiences. Things like Nikon and Ticketmaster
will be good as people that go to concerts and festivals would be interested in
these. I’ve also included music related
things like Skullcandy headphones and ITunes.
Target Audience Moodboard
This summarises the target audience that I am aiming my
music magazine at. My magazine is aimed at people that are into alternative
things, whether it be music, clothes or anything really. You can see that it’s aimed mainly towards
females. This mood board shows that I want to branch out to different kinds of
personalities, from the rebellious kind to the quieter blogger types. This is
an alternative magazine for all people that love this style.
Thursday, 27 November 2014
My Original Ideas Statement
My magazine will be a music magazine which focuses on the
alternative rock genre. I will also bring elements of country and indie music
into the magazine to introduce these similar types of music to the alternative
rock fans.
My target audience will be aimed at people around the ages
16-25. I plan on making the magazine reach these ages as I can cover more
mature subjects and still have the modern element, so it will have a good range
of topics and artists. I also plan on a good mix of a formal and informal house
style. This way I appeal to both ends of the age range I have set for my target
audience. I want to be able to bring new types of music to my audience’s
attention and appeal to large and small fan bases. I will do this by covering
different artists, some that people may not have heard of. Alternative rock can be a wide genre and
there are lots of styles that it can delve into. I plan on exploring different
ways in which I can use this genre of music to make my magazine unique. I’ll be
taking inspiration from magazines such as Mojo and NME as they both reach the
kinds of audience I’m looking at attracting. I also could include some
television and film content in order to appeal to wider audiences.
The colours I would like to use on my magazine would be more
aimed towards the female gender as I want my magazine to be more for a female
demographic. I would like to use black and whites with a few other colours that
just add to the overall style of the magazine.
What I've Learnt From The Textual Analysis
From analysis pages from other magazines I’ve learnt new
things about the style of the kind of magazines I want to make. I analysed
various pages from Mojo, Q, Kerrang and NME which all explore different
elements of rock or indie music.
It’s become clear to me that most magazines have a certain
three of four colour schemes that they stick too. Q, Kerrang and NME all have
used the colour red amongst black and white to stand out, this is something
that I want to take into consideration as red is a bold colour and all three of
those colours contrast each other nicely.
I’ve also learnt that the magazines that are seen more as
indie/alternative (eg. Q, Mojo and NME) all have elements of a formal house
style in their magazine. Q is aimed at a predominantly older audience and is
more formal than informal. Then you have Kerrang which is aimed predominantly
at younger audiences so it’s mostly informal. By looking at these magazines I
have realised that I want to make a magazine that reaches out to younger and
older audiences so I will want to have a mixture of informal and formal style.
One this that these magazines have in common is their
masthead. They all are at the top of the magazine and are in the same colours
that they are always in. All of the magazine mastheads I looked at are iconic
to their brand. Both Mojo and Kerrang’s were so well known that they can have
their main image covering part of the masthead because their audience don’t
need to see all of it to recognize it.
The thing I learned about images is that they are probably
the first thing audiences notice so I need to use a few relevant ones. Both
feature articles I looked at had the main image taking up about an entire page
of the double page spread. Audiences don’t want to have to read lots of text and
pictures make it very clear who the article is about. They also attract the
artists fan base to the magazine.
I know now that I need to feature artists that will be
connected with the alternative rock genre. I also know for the images that I
take myself I need to make them fairly serious as all these magazines use the
idea of seriousness in their photo shoots to connote to the style of music that
they focus on. Serious codes of expression connote to serious music.
In my magazine I need to feature three to four fonts to make
my magazine varied and to keep the design interesting. I’ll need to vary my
fonts from serif to sans serif due to the mixed house style I’m aiming for.
My magazine needs to follow the conventions of magazines. My
front cover need to feature a main image that takes up around two thirds of the
page. If the image is of a band then I would have to re-think my design
though. Cover lines need to be at the
sides of the front cover so they can be seen clearly.
The Magazine Industry
The Magazine Industry;
In Britain there are more than 8000 titles published in the magazine industry. Each one of these titles is categorised. These categories are to separate the different types of magazine, where you’d find, their target audience and what they contain. There are seven main categories. Consumer is the main category and the most popular. There are over 3,200 consumer titles. These consumer magazines can be general or specialist and can be found in most news agents and online. General titles aim is to entertain and inform whereas specialist are directed more towards a certain activity or hobby. The business magazines are meant for people at work. This is similar to how customer and staff magazines are directed particularly at certain audiences. Customer magazines are given to customers by organizations as a form of marketing. Staff magazines are used in companies to help aid and teach their staff.
Newspaper supplements is another categories, these are the magazines you get free in a newspaper. An example would be a TV listings magazine.
Part works magazines that readers collect to gather a certain knowledge base on a topic. These normally have a set amount of issues. They often have a certain theme and come with a set of objects or free gifts for the readers to collect.
Academic journals are aimed at a target audience of university students. These magazines will be the kind to discuss complex topics that only the university students would understand.
The biggest consumer magazine publishers in the UK are Bauer, Time Inc, BBC and Hearst. These are responsible for the publishing of a vast majority of the consumer magazines. Bauer and Time Inc are the big two both making up 20-25% of the market. Consumer magazines are said to sell £2 million each year.
In average 1.4 Billion magazines are sold every year. This is lower than what it was in 1970, but has increased by 2 million since 1992. 85% of the population now read magazines.
Advertisers also use magazines to reach out to audiences. They usually spend £745 million on magazines in order to do this.
In the past decade around 500 new magazines titles have been launched, however it is said that only around 3 in 10 actually last for more than 4 years.
Friday, 7 November 2014
Thursday, 6 November 2014
Thursday, 23 October 2014
College Magazine Questionnaire Analysis
Magazine Questionnaire Analysis:
After collecting results from out surveys it was clear to
see what our target audience want from a college magazine. Out of all of the
students we asked 65% were female and 35% were male. Out of all of those people
95% of people said they didn't read the college magazine. This shows that the
current product doesn't work as its target audience is not reading it. Only 5%
of people said they read it, meaning it needs to be improved. The vast majority
of people wouldn't want to pay much for the magazine as 85% said they would
either pay nothing or 50p. If you set the price at 50p it makes the magazine
look better as your charging for it, so it must be worth something at
least. 70% of students wanted the
magazine to be issued either monthly or every half term.
When it comes to the content and appearance of the magazine
students were asked what colour scheme they’d like. The top three colours
students wanted to be used were Blue, black and white. However red, green and
yellow had a fair few votes too. When it came to the image on the front cover
students wanted various things. 40% wanted an image of a fellow student whereas
30% wanted a celebrity and 30% wanted a nature image. This means you could
alternate what image is used to please a mass audience. An informal or mixed house style were the
most popular options for questing six. 50% said informal, 40% said mixed, so
the magazine would be mostly informal with some formal content every so often
to meet the demands of the audience.
Students want the magazine to include things such as music,
sport, college tips, free gifts and TV/film. So the front cover would need to
advertise these things in the coverlines to attract the audience. 100% of students said they wanted a page on
jobs so this is a feature you would definitely put in the magazine.
College Magazine Analysis
The colours this magazine has used consist of Blue’s and
pale orange. These colours complement each other and are easily readable as
they are light and stand out on the darker blue background. It uses rule of
thirds by having the model in the centre with cover lines either side of him.
This almost gives the magazine a symmetrical type look which makes it look
organised. The cover lines are all relevant to the target audience this
magazine is aiming at: students. You can tell that it’s aimed at older,
university students as it mentions celebrating “the big 2-1” referring to
becoming an adult. It has things relevant to younger audiences like texting,
which is light hearted but also has more serious cover lines so there is a
balance. It uses a main image of Mike Posner, a role model that younger
audiences would recognize, so it gets there attention and appeals to them. The
barcode on the bottom is conventional to magazines and lets the audience know
the price: which is free so it is affordable to struggling students. The cover
uses two simple fonts that are readable but also modern and suit the overall theme
of the magazine. The main headline is in a different font to the cover lines as
it is in the font that the magazine uses constantly for the title, it’s
recognized by the magazines regular audiences as it’s become iconic to this
magazines look.
Wednesday, 22 October 2014
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