Yearbook Spring Semester Week 4

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Step-by-Step Column Design Designing a 10-column spread.
Advertisements

YEARBOOK Layout and Design.
Basics of Designing Spreads. walsworthyearbooks.com/yearbooksuite Bleed: Photos, artwork or graphics that extend off of the trim area of a spread Caption:
YEARBOOK DICTIONARY Words to Know… So you know what I’m Talking about.
UNDERSTANDING WHY DESIGN MATTERS. Understanding Why Design Matters You have a theme. You even have a great cover. Now it’s time to figure out what goes.
5.2 | Yearbook Design. STEP 1 – LEARN Begin by reviewing the yearbook design principles on the next slide. You will be shown the process designers use.
The newest trend in yearbook layout design
Yearbook Layout Design
 Each year should have a unique theme.  Demonstrated on the cover and throughout the book.  This unifies the book.
Journalism Terms All about design Presented by Karen Wagner.
Terms you need to know. Yearbook Lingo  Attribution: to credit a quotation to the source  Bleed: extending pictures or graphic elements beyond the edge.
Yearbook Vocabulary By, John Michael. Content Content of a yearbook Study Guide. Questions with answers.
TERMS AND DEFINITIONS Yearbook Terminology. Ladder A page-by-page planner and deadline tracker used to identify content, record deadlines, plan color.
Essential Design Terms. Terms Used When Discussing Design Spread—refers to 2 facing pages. Design should consider both pages when building a new page.
All About Yearbooks: the weekend edition Instructor: Brian Gervais Layout & design the fundamentals.
DESIGN: basic. Basic Design [Organized arrangement] of images & words to tell a story.
General LayoutGeneral Layout  Should be a mix of copy (text) and pictures  The layout should look balanced  No faces in the gutter (middle space between.
Yearbook Bingo.
W E ’ R E W I T H Y O U E V E R Y S T E P O F T H E W A Y.
5.2 | Yearbook Design.
Newspaper Design Read ALL ABOUT it! Newspaper pages come in a variety of sizes, but the two most common formats are broadsheet (13 1/2” x 21”) and tabloid.
Good design helps the reader focus on content!.  Dominance: achieved by making a content element significantly larger so that it becomes a focal point.
Yearbook Vocabulary SVMS Yearbook. Pica A graphical measurement equaling 1/6 of an inch. Pica Inch.
Graphic Design in 5 Easy Steps Graphic Design Create an effective spread in 5 easy steps!
Posters, Magazines, Websites
Curriculum ~ Terms Terms you should know to do your job right! Yearbooking Terms.
Basic Terminology Yearbook Ms. Hamilton.
Essential Design Terms. Terms Used When Discussing Design Spread—refers to 2 facing pages. Design should consider both pages when building a new page.
New Trends in Design Adding unity, balance, structure and dominance to your layouts.
Yearbook Terms.
Terms You Should Know.  Theme: The central idea or concept. This should reflect the school and students in some way. It will carry throughout the book.
One Point Perspective Week 2: August
Basic Principles of Design SWBAT produce double page spreads utilizing all 6 design principles.
PRINCIPLES OF DESIGN FYI: WHITE TYPE ON A BLACK BACKGROUND IS CALLED REVERSE TYPE.
Basic Design Every spread in the book starts here.
Basic Rules for Design. Bull’s Eye: Order in which you place your elements First/center element on a page should be photos, then move out to text, then.
Yearbook Vocabulary Terms You Should Know.
Organization and Study Skills
BASIC DESIGN Nothing basic about it..
Yearbook Vocabulary SVMS Yearbook.
Journalism/ Yearbook Week 10.
DESIGN that ROCKS.
Yearbook Layout Design
Yearbook mini projects
Alternative Story Forms
COLUMNS The foundation of design Sally Manke
Yearbook Vocabulary Terms You Should Know.
Basic Principles of Layout
Yearbook DESIGN TERMINOLOGY.
How did they do THAT?.
Journalism/ Yearbook Week 17.
Yearbook Layout Design
SPRING SEMESTER WEEK 5.
The newest trend in yearbook layout design
5.2 | Yearbook Design.
8th Grade Week 4: 8/29-9/2 Mon: “Block Party”, Worksheet Due tomorrow
CCR 12 Week School Year.
SPRING SEMESTER WEEK 10.
Week 5 Film/TV Writing.
TV/Film Writing Spring Semester Week 5.
DESIGN ONE Objective: The students will apply basic desktop publishing design principles to enhance their documents.
Dominant Elements.
All you wanted to know and more
6.4 | Quick Reads & Basic Design
SPRING SEMESTER WEEK 7.
Yearbook Spring Semester Week 3
SPRING SEMESTER WEEK 6.
SPRING SEMESTER WEEK 10.
Chapter 18: Yearbooks and Magazines
Presentation transcript:

Yearbook Spring Semester Week 4 Monday Yearbook Spring Semester Week 4

Monday Bell Ringer & Agenda: Set a reminder to bring in Valentine’s Day candy this week. Each bag donated will give you two extra credit points. Up to ten extra credit points. Last day is Friday!!! Put your phone away. Pick up a computer and log into Walsworth. Bell Ringer Reminders Page Ladder Newspaper

Reminders: Candy Grams: Newspaper article: Ad Sales: No one has brought in candy… I will cancel fundraiser if no candy is brought in Newspaper article: Due Wednesday! I have 3 articles I believe Ad Sales: Again, you have until the end of the quarter (March 10th) to sell one ad! One of the 5 summative you have in this class!

Page Ladder: There are 96 pages in the book. 10 of them I have taken Portraits, graduation, and ads That means there are 86 pages for 13 students. 6 pages (3-4 spreads per student) First, let’s make sure you know which you signed up for. Let’s continue claiming.

Rest of Bell: Work on newspaper article OR Work on flyers for Candy Grams

Tuesday Bell Ringer & Agenda: Find your new seats! Why does design matter? Use a magazine and find one example that you feel exuberates great design. Bell Ringer Theme selection

Why Design Matters: Today: We need to look at theme again and decide what we want the theme to be for the yearbook… I recommend we use a theme that is in Walsworth. Log in to Walsworth and open a spread. Look at the themes/templates & write down the pros & cons of each using the worksheet. Keep in mind our Cover! (Hanging on board) Then answer the question at the end! When finished, work on newspaper article (Due tomorrow)

Wednesday Bell Ringer & Agenda: Favorite theme so far? Bell Ringer Finish theme

Why Design Matters: Today: We need to look at theme again and decide what we want the theme to be for the yearbook… I recommend we use a theme that is in Walsworth. Log in to Walsworth and open a spread. Look at the themes/templates & write down the pros & cons of each using the worksheet. Keep in mind our Cover! (Hanging on board) Then answer the question at the end! When finished, work on newspaper article (Due tomorrow)

Thursday Bell Ringer & Agenda: Objective — In this lesson, you will learn: To understand and recognize what makes a strong visual design Bell Ringer: Agenda: Get a piece of paper and get ready for some notes. Bell Ringer Design Vocab Examples of great spreads

Reminders: Candy Grams: Newspaper article: Ad Sales: Good to go!! Due Yesterday!! I have 3 articles I believe! (Gary, Indyah, Casey) Ad Sales: Again, you have until the end of the quarter (March 10th) to sell one ad! One of the 5 summative you have in this class!

Understanding Why Design Matters You have a theme. You even have a great cover. Now it’s time to figure out what goes on each page of your yearbook. Publication design is more than placing pictures on pages. It’s more than picking pretty fonts. It’s more than using green, “because it’s my favorite color.” Good designers evolve and good design communicates. It draws the reader in, it enhances stories, it drives your well-chosen theme. Let’s get started… Basic Design should take one week to teach and then a week to practice and revise.

Let’s learn some VOCABULARY. You will see these on a 10x10!

Caption: The copy that explains the Who, What, When, Where, Why and How of action in a photo; plan space for every photo to have a caption Cut-out background (COB): A photo where the background is removed Dominant element: The largest eye-catching photo or collection of photos or elements on a spread Eyeline: A one-pica line that connects the left and right pages; all design elements should sit on or hang from this line External margin: A margin of white space that will frame the edges of the spread Copy: Refers to all text on a spread; copy includes captions, stories, headlines. All spreads need copy to help tell the story of the year Folio tab: Words or phrases accompanying the folio identifying the content are called folio tabs Folio: Page number on a yearbook spread Bleed: Photos, artwork or graphics that extend off of the trim area of a spread Double-page spread (DPS): Two facing pages; the left page is an even number

Internal margin/spacing: A consistent amount of white space between elements; traditionally, this has been one pica. For this design unit, it shall remain one pica. Headline: Word or words set in large type that attracts the reader to the spread; headlines traditionally are placed above copy blocks Type: Printed letters or characters White space/negative space: The absence of any element Pica: A journalistic unit of measurement; one pica = 1/6 of an inch Gutter: The place where the left and right pages meet; the gutter is often one or two picas wide and is folded as the book comes together. Logo: Artwork used to represent a company; logos can be a unifying graphic for the yearbook theme

Observing the Elements of Good Editorial Design Design helps communicate the story. The chosen photos, type and graphics are arranged on the pages to help the reader. Design elements are not just thrown down willy-nilly, there is a plan. Looking at great design will allow you to understand the importance of how the elements communicate. Lucy Strunk

Spotting Good Design Elements Materials needed: Several magazines, Walsworth’s Possibilities book Look at several of the yearbooks featured in the Possibilities book. Look for examples of the following: Dynamic photography Captions for all pictures Eye-catching graphics Use of color Then, find a magazine that has an amazing spread. Make sure it includes all of the above. Tear out a spread (two pages) and identify the vocab we just went over! Then, Attach a half sheet explaining WHY you feel it is an amazing spread. Specifically what makes it stand out? Ask students to notice the arrangement of materials on a spread. Answers should include: · Large photo toward the middle · Smaller photos · All photos are rectangular · Photos clustered toward the inside · Writing to the outside of the pictures · White space between the pictures is uniform/consistent · White space is to the outside edge Open a magazine like Entertainment Weekly, ESPN Magazine, Southern Living and you should also get the same responses. Use websites like Pinterest, and show different editorial design to the class; discuss your likes and dislikes of each spread. Again, focus on dominance, consistent font choices and inside margins.

Friday Bell Ringer & Agenda: Objectives — In this lesson, you will learn: How to recognize a well-designed yearbook spread Basic design concepts that include column structure, external margins, internal margins, eyeline, points and picas Bell Ringer: Agenda: Define the following on a post it. Margin Gutter Eyeline Folio tab Place on board for grade. NAME IT Bell Ringer Design

Lesson 2: Starting With a Blank Page When it comes to yearbook design, where do you begin? Pages are designed as double-page spreads (DPS). A double-page spread means the left and right pages are seen as one layout, one unit – a horizontal rectangle instead of two vertical rectangles. The spread has external margins. This area has two jobs: To create a frame of white space around the page For the printer and the binder. The printer will trim the folded pages so they are neat as they sew them into the book.

Lesson 2: Starting With a Blank Page You will be working in a journalistic unit of measurement called a pica. One pica equals 1/6 of an inch. Each pica is made up of 12 points.

Lesson 2: Starting With a Blank Page Let’s do a math lesson! If you have a 72-point headline, how many picas do you have? How many inches is a 72-point headline? 36 points = 3 picas 72 points = 6 picas 72 points = 1 inch

Three Areas Now on to the actual page design. For this, you need to think about three areas:

Manipulating Photos to Create an Eyeline and Consistent Internal Margins Materials needed: Various magazines, newspapers and yearbooks (preferably not your school’s book) 8 ½ x 11 white paper Assignment: Take the sheet of white paper and fold in in half from top to bottom, short sides together. Tear the paper in half. Take one-half of the paper and fold that in half and tear it as well. Now you have two 1/4 pages. Again, take one of those pieces and fold and tear it into two 1/8 pages. Continued on next slide  Each student will have a layout sheet and a white piece of paper. · Check to see if the class has all rectangles on the spread · Check to see if dominant is placed toward the center · Check to see if all elements are one pica apart · Check to see if there is an eyeline Once all students have the concept, let them play with different variations using all the same rules.

Manipulating Photos to Create an Eyeline and Consistent Internal Margins Now take the largest piece of paper and lay it down in the middle of the spread. Do not place it in the direct middle. Yes, it may and should cross the gutter. Leave only one pica separation and lay down the next largest piece of paper. Once the two are down, see if you notice an eyeline. Now using the eyeline, place all pieces of paper leaving only one pica between each element. All pieces of paper should sit on or hang from the eyeline.