Sunday, March 25, 2007




Stanley's newspaper design.



Stanley Mitchell.

here is my newspaper design.

there is an error: it should say: "you lose" not "ou"

apoligies.

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Friday, March 23, 2007


Here's my newspaper design.

This is my newspaper. It's all about spring break. All the pictures are of my fabulous trip to Florida with my bff's. I wrote the articles myself but don't take them too seriously.

Here's my newspaper.

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Here's my newspaper...obviously a LOST fan.

-Casey

This is my tabloid. I really like the word fabulous...and i thought its fun to say... hope you feel the same.
-sara

Thursday, March 22, 2007

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Um, it's pretty self-explanatory. Yes, I know the text for the London article is random letters. I don't know how I managed to do this, but I can't get rid of the filler text without deleting a lot of the layout, so I'm leaving it.

Here's my newspaper layout.

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.

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My spread.

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My spread.

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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'.

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