Monday, 8 November 2010
Ellie Graham A2 Media Stratford College: New Media - Facebook
Sunday, 7 March 2010
Lecturer Feedback - RESEARCH & PLANNING (max 20 marks)
Lecturer Feedback - CONSTRUCTION (max 60 marks)
Front cover - '6 page poster special etc' text is justified left too much. Telling us whats on this month just in images means i have to guess, is it a story about a gig or a club opening or ...? Are those club images yours? Remember we need to see evidence of photo planning and test shots that would prove they are yours and you can stick to your plans. Bar code placement seems odd. What is sub soldiers and what is the logo in bottom right? Im not sure the whited out effect works. It would be nice to see some dubstep or d&b mags analysed in your research so that you can prove the designs and choices you use follow convention and/or cleverly break them.
Contents - im pleased to see a range of shot sizes and lots of images here but the problem is they are all obviously of the same event/night! So you say 'Faithless try thier hand at dubstep' but the image used is the same guy as on the cover (for example). The copy for the Expense story contains a spacing error and im not sure about using the word 'massive' twice in such a short space. The Borgore copy hits the image below. Doctor P is justified to the right too much.
Article - Same issues with images as above. Your drop capital E needs lifting. Check spelling and grammar. Get rid of any oprhans.
Lecturer Feedback - EVALUATION (max 20 marks)
A couple of times you seem to infer knowledge about why you have done something i.e. you say the subject looks away from the audience and so this is appealing to potential DJ's. Why? Everything must be justified by your research somewhere. Im confused when you talk about ATM, are you saying your should be sold alongside it, or as part of it or? Do you have evidence of heavy drug use in this community and hence your design choices? If there is heavy use is it possible that by going to much down that road your exclding audience who like the tunes but dont use?
Wednesday, 10 February 2010
Evaluation
For my music magazine, I decided to challenge, develop and follow magazine conventions. On the front cover of my magazine, my masthead is published on the top of the page as this is a typical magazine convention, however, following this convention will allow more of my target audience to see my magazine as shops place magazines on waterfall shelving, so therefore allows the potential customers to see the name of my magazine without having to sift through a variety of magazines. In most magazines the model is staring towards the audience to grab the readers attention and to draw them into purchasing the magazine, however, i decided to challenge this convention as my model is looking away from the camera, but as my magazine is targeted towards those who are interesting in reading information on the techniques and methods of DJing, so therefore this image worked as it would be appealing to my main target audience. My contents page is very similar to the front cover as it follows some of the rules laid out by the industry; this is due to having a big contents header at the top of the page. I have listed all the main features in the magazine which is a very popular magazine content’s conventions. On a typical magazine's contents page they intend to have the audience focus on what's included in the magazine rather than the pictures, however, i challenged this convention as I wanted my images to strongly catch the audience's eye. I made my images stand out my editing them on Photoshop, giving them a slight shadow which looks as if the images are coming out of the page; therefore I was happy with my contents page. My double page spread also follow suit, as I have carried out the same colour scheme to the rest of my magazine, the font styles are also similar to create a flow and consistency throughout my music magazine. Another successful feature that challenges typical magazine conventions is the use of Polaroid’s; this is due to helping break up the two pages. Similarly to the contents page, I used a blurred effect to emphasize the images, this also shows consistency. For my magazine, I decided you use the same colour scheme throughout; I decided to use colours which appealed to my target audience, so I thought vibrant colours would trigger off different emotions and certainly catch the reader’s eye. The colours which i used was green and pink, I felt that they are very psychedelic, referencing subliminally to drug culture which is linked heavily with the club scene.
The Dubstep community are mainly young. Because of the scene and culture behind the genre of music and the audience, I included a feature looking into the best club in
As a kind of media institution I would release it inside ATM magazine. ATM is a magazine about Drum and Bass. This is then the next step because Dubstep has evolved from Drum and Bass. Because of the link between the two the same DJ’s may be in both for different articles/features. This will increase the predetermined audience that follow such DJ’s to buy the magazine. Also how it would make the people that listen to Drum and Bass, l but don’t know much about Dubstep, informed about the happenings inside the Genre. There are two main reasons why it would be released inside ATM: to raise awareness about Dubstep, and to review the reaction from people without actually releasing the magazine on its own increasing the risk of potential loss. ATM magazine is already on sale in all the major stores. It is in the main WHSmith stores, HMV, and is being distributed to local communities where the underground music scene is at its highs.
From this project I have delved deep into the criteria needed to make a magazine that would be accepted as the norm in today’s society. I have also had to undergo the learning process of Adobe Photoshop, and Adobe InDesign. The original structure and layout was achieved through Photoshop, and then all of the writing was created in InDesign. This brought a new challenge because at first I had used Photoshop but not to a level that was needed to produce a magazine. However throughout this process I have learnt a bundle of new skills that should help push future work to new limits. Layering was the most interesting part of Photoshop. There is so much you can do with layering and it was really fun and challenging uncovering these things. Using advanced tools such as smudging to a good effect and retouching photographs were the main uses.
The Preliminary assignment was a very flat quite boring magazine with not a lot going on. All the lines were parallel, and the features were not shown in as much detail. Looking back at my preliminary exercise now I can’t see how it would be relevant to the audience, as it is not that attractive to a younger audience. However all the aspects that were needed in it were and it was a first boundary. Working from that I started to develop my skills. I wanted to push what I had done to create something that I would be proud of. I used my preliminary exercise as a starting point, but it soon became apparent after research that this would not be successful; it would be3 a lot more attractive to an older audience. Therefore I wanted to take everything in my preliminary and reverse it. Instead of straight lines there is lots of movements and different shapes. The paint drips and spray paint create a flow. Instead of quite neutral colours I went for vibrant ones to really grab the potential buyer’s eye. I think the difference between my first and second magazine is massive and this is because of the research and development into audiences.
I am very satisfied with my final result. I think it represents the community very well, it is very attention grabbing, and either uses or challenges all the conventions you would usually expected, without straying from them too far.
Tuesday, 12 January 2010
Sunday, 10 January 2010
Wednesday, 6 January 2010
Tuesday, 5 January 2010
Friday, 11 December 2009
Friday, 4 December 2009
Tuesday, 1 December 2009
Friday, 27 November 2009
My Idea
My Idea
I have decided to make a Dubstep magazine. Dubstep has really taken the country by storm over the past couple of years, and it is seen by many as the new Drum and Bass. Also, as it is my favourite style of music and because of this I feel I would be best able to produce something that I know most about, and feel most passionate about. I also took the advantage of doing something that hasn’t been done before. There are not any solely Dubstep magazines. There is usually only feature inside DJ magazines. Therefore I thought this would give me a challenge. I have to try and make something that could rival something like ATM, but not aim it at the drum and bass fans. To show the current popularity of Dubstep I researched online. On Facebook alone since September 2009, 73,899 people have joined the page called ‘Dubstep’, showing its popularity. Comparing this to the Drum and Bass page which has 102,790 fans, however drum and bass first came out in 1996 whereas Dubstep has only recently sprouted as an off branch of drum and bass. One of the big reasons that Dubstep has become so popular is because of the producers changing from drum and bass to Dubstep. These producers include some big names like, Breakage, Noah D, Chase and Status, Icicle, and Chromestar, all obviously seeing Dubstep as the new Drum and Bass.
My target audience would be young music fans that are interested in the future of digital music. Literally this includes anyone that goes out to clubs, listens to the radio, even pop fans. Dubstep originated from the underground scene, it is still being played in underground nightclubs. However because of Dubstep’s new influence in the mainstream through songs like Skream – in for the kill (La roux), and Rusko – Remedy (little Boots), both massive pop songs, and the remixes were both in the charts. This is getting a lot more people listening to Dubstep, and its success is evident with there progression through the charts. Also the radio is helping it to be listened by more and more people through Mary Anne Hobbs’ radio show on a Thursday from 2-4.
Thursday, 26 November 2009
Questionairre
Market research - Questionnaire.
What is your age category?
15-18 [_] 19-22 [_] Other [_]
What is your gender?
Male [_] Female [_] other [_]
What genre of music do you listen to?
Drum and bass [_] Dubstep [_] house [_] Garage [_] Grime [_] 2 step [_] Techno [_] Trance [_] pop [_] Rock [_] Indie [_] hip-hop[_]
What pages do you mostly look at in the magazine?
Interviews [_] Articles [_] Gossip [_] Fashion [_]
Other (please state) ___________________________________________________
What catches your eye on a front page?
Big titles [_] Bold colours [_] Pictures [_] Title [_]
Are you involved in any of these forums?
Dnb forum [_] Dogs on acid [_] Forum.breakbeat [_] dubstepforum [_]
Not [_]
Do you use a contents page as a reference page?
Yes [_] No [_]
What is your disposable income?
£0-5 [_] £5-10 [_] £10-15 [_] £15+ [_]
Do you play an instrument of your own?
Yes [_] No [_]
Are you a regular buyer of a magazine?
Yes [_] no [_]
If yes please state,
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