Wednesday, December 09, 2009
Hey guys...check out Philadephia Photographer Matt Godfrey at www.mattgodfrey.com.
Friday, April 27, 2007
The Curse of William Penn. It's the reason why Philly has never won a championship.
http://astro.temple.edu/~tua28903/index.html
http://astro.temple.edu/~tua28903/index.html
Labels: Matt Price Web Site
Here is my website, thanks to all the TA'a who got me through this class
http://astro.temple.edu/~tua13096
http://astro.temple.edu/~tua13096
Thursday, April 26, 2007
http://astro.temple.edu/~tua39763/
Rather than just say IT'S MY WEBSITE ZOMG, I'll give a short description.
It's supposed to be a news website from the year 2075. I'd like to think that's what it turned out to be. My original ambitions were a bit too grandiose for this particular project, though, so it's not as content rich as it could have been.
Rather than just say IT'S MY WEBSITE ZOMG, I'll give a short description.
It's supposed to be a news website from the year 2075. I'd like to think that's what it turned out to be. My original ambitions were a bit too grandiose for this particular project, though, so it's not as content rich as it could have been.
Labels: Geoffrey Barnes, website
Here is my site!! It's an e-zine of my celebrity tabloid mag EDGEceleb. Have a good summer everyone :-)
http://astro.temple.edu/~tua12254
http://astro.temple.edu/~tua12254
http://astro.temple.edu/~tua26413/index.html
So this is my site, it's a feature-y webzine called PoP! The working links are on the home page, the music link, and the home link on the music page. The colors are a bit much, I understand, and this looks ultra amateur but I'm completely illiterate in Dreamweaver so sue me. This is a design class, I've focused on that.
So this is my site, it's a feature-y webzine called PoP! The working links are on the home page, the music link, and the home link on the music page. The colors are a bit much, I understand, and this looks ultra amateur but I'm completely illiterate in Dreamweaver so sue me. This is a design class, I've focused on that.
Hey all,
so after like a million times, i finally finished it. matt here is the link
http://astro.temple.edu/~tua03496/index2.html
if you dont put in "index2.html" it will take you to my old website...just a heads up
thanks for a good semester. have a good summer
so after like a million times, i finally finished it. matt here is the link
http://astro.temple.edu/~tua03496/index2.html
if you dont put in "index2.html" it will take you to my old website...just a heads up
thanks for a good semester. have a good summer
Labels: Here's my website
Sunday, March 25, 2007
Stanley Mitchell.
here is my newspaper design.
there is an error: it should say: "you lose" not "ou"
apoligies.
Labels: newspaper
Friday, March 23, 2007
Labels: Matt Price Sports Paper
Labels: Kenny Walter, Newspaper Spread
Thursday, March 22, 2007
Labels: Linnay
Labels: Dave Nescio
Oh, look! A newspaper spread (so to speak).
Turns out it became less of an overall movie digest and more of a front spread for a movie digest for movies I'm interested in. Whoops! Way to not encourage self-effacement.
Labels: Geoffrey Barnes, Newspaper Spread
Wednesday, March 14, 2007
NEWSPAPER LAYOUT DIRECTIONS
FOR YOUR PROJECT: The photos, headlines and cutlines should work together. If you have a photo of the Phillies then your headline and cutline should match what is going on in the photo. You can get creative but if you have a sports picture you should not have a headline about plants or anything like that.
Sizes:
Broadsheet = 21.5” high x 14” wide
Tabloid = 14” high x 11” wide
Columns:
Broadsheet = 5-6 columns
Tabloid = 4-5 columns
∑ Remember that columns aren’t set in stone. You can experiment here.
TEXT
-Stories are on average 12 inches (so the book says) but each leg would be between 2 and 20 inches.
Stories can be borrowed from other publications as long as you credit the correct writer and publication. It's up to you to gather the text. That means if you have to retype it then retype it. Put the proper Byline on each story.
PHOTOS
-Photos are mainly horizontal rectangles because that’s the way we see. The other shapes are vertical rectangles and a square, which is rarely used but does work sometimes.
-Photos, like stories, are up to you to find. Hi-Resolution photos can be pulled from whatever publication you want, just credit the proper source and photographer. This means if the credit in the paper says 'David Maialetti / Daily News' then your paper should say 'David Maialetti / Daily News'.
FOR YOUR PROJECT: The photos, headlines and cutlines should work together. If you have a photo of the Phillies then your headline and cutline should match what is going on in the photo. You can get creative but if you have a sports picture you should not have a headline about plants or anything like that.
Sizes:
Broadsheet = 21.5” high x 14” wide
Tabloid = 14” high x 11” wide
Columns:
Broadsheet = 5-6 columns
Tabloid = 4-5 columns
∑ Remember that columns aren’t set in stone. You can experiment here.
TEXT
-Stories are on average 12 inches (so the book says) but each leg would be between 2 and 20 inches.
Stories can be borrowed from other publications as long as you credit the correct writer and publication. It's up to you to gather the text. That means if you have to retype it then retype it. Put the proper Byline on each story.
PHOTOS
-Photos are mainly horizontal rectangles because that’s the way we see. The other shapes are vertical rectangles and a square, which is rarely used but does work sometimes.
-Photos, like stories, are up to you to find. Hi-Resolution photos can be pulled from whatever publication you want, just credit the proper source and photographer. This means if the credit in the paper says 'David Maialetti / Daily News' then your paper should say 'David Maialetti / Daily News'.
Labels: Newspaper Guidelines