Early magazine covers where all made from hand they did not have printers or stamps to make the work go much faster. The poster cover is mostly about a type of magazine that has no words. The only words it shows are the title of magazine and a really eye catching photo or portrait. The pictures married to type has to do with the model overlapping the title it also has to be in a outdoor area. The forest of words is a magazine cover fulled of word or headlines to make the reader what to read the magazine or try to persuade him or her to buy the magazine.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Tuesday, February 19, 2013
Thursday, February 14, 2013
Friday, February 8, 2013
magazine cover part one
1.formal
2.informal
3.informal
4.formal
5.formal
6.formal
7.formal
8.informal
9.formal
10.informal
11.informal
12.environmental
13.informal
14.formal
15.environmental
16.informal
17. formal
2.informal
3.informal
4.formal
5.formal
6.formal
7.formal
8.informal
9.formal
10.informal
11.informal
12.environmental
13.informal
14.formal
15.environmental
16.informal
17. formal
Monday, February 4, 2013
five tips
1. Familiar recognition from issue to issue (that’s the brand)
2. Emotionally irresistible (that’s the image’s appeal)
3. Arousing curiosity (that’s to pull the casual glancer in)
4. Intellectually stimulating, interesting (that’s to promise benefits)
5. Efficient, fast, easy to scan (that’s showing off the service)
2. Emotionally irresistible (that’s the image’s appeal)
3. Arousing curiosity (that’s to pull the casual glancer in)
4. Intellectually stimulating, interesting (that’s to promise benefits)
5. Efficient, fast, easy to scan (that’s showing off the service)
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)




