task 8!
TRANSCRIPT
Task 8
Alan Smith
Tabloid Newspapers
You can see the difference in approach
towards headlines with each newspaper.
The ‘Broken Hart’ used by the Mirror was a
good pun that described England's failings in
the World cup yet again. Using Goalkeeper
Joe Hart instead of ‘Heart’
This is something I could look into when
producing a headline in relation to the task
chosen to create.
All of these newspapers share similarities, they
are all very clear and concise. They mainly
choose large black, bold text over white paper.
To make it stand out even further, the
remaining text on the page is either changed to
another font or colour.
These tabloids are all aiming to make sales,
therefore the workers behind them want to
make them appealing.
The font, colour, layout, style and image is
important when looking at the front cover.
It is also very important I choose all the correct
aspects when looking at the large variety of
papers.
The Sun would not have a very formal
headline and keep to one colour.
The font is very clear and contrasts with the dark
background image behind. The use of the white shade
helps this stand out and keeps to the consistent colour
of the house style.
The layout here is very common for a huge news story
as it has taken the entire front page instead of multiple
news stories.
Being clear helps to interact with the demographic it is
aimed towards.
Using quotes brings the story out further without the use
of text that can often put many of the readers off.
Keeping the text short is a good way of retaining
attention of the reader.
The style of this is something I could use when
producing my own piece of work. The use the imagery
in the background covering the white space with the text
overlapping.
The choice of the image is very if not the most important
for the front cover as this is the first thing the reader
notices.
The capital letters
make the title stand
out that much more
and is almost
impossible not to
notice it.
The use of the
goalkeeper Joe
‘Hart’ in the image
is something
important as it has
to tie in with the
heading.
Unlike The Mirror and Sun, the Daily Mail
take a similar yet slightly more formal
approach.
In terms of the headline, the often stay
away from puns such as the last slide and
get straight to the point like seen in this
example.
‘SACK THEM!’ taking up a large amount
of the front page but still keeping enough
for other news.
Also with this newspaper, a small piece of
text is underneath to support the heading.
The font chosen is large and stands out
but also allows room for other aspects to
stand out on the page such as the
‘My marriage drove me to the brink…’ this
can be clearly seen as it is supported by a
dark purple background and imagery
towards the left hand side.
The imagery when used for this
particular tabloid is often not very
big as the text is seen as more
important.
The layout therefore is altered and
the imagery will go underneath all
the text instead of overlapping.
The style of the newspaper is to
make every clear and organised on
the front page to reflect the whole
paper.
Having the text underlined makes
this stand out that much more and
grabs the readers attention.
The Sun focus on having one major story on the
front with shorter news articles surrounding it rather
than one main attraction.
This is to offer a wider variety for the readers, if
someone is not interested in the IVF news they can
see football scores at the top or entertainment on
the left in small text.
Equating to everyone’s taste can help produce
more sales for the newspaper.
The main news story often has one image to
support the text with a short extract of what has
happened.
The font is kept large as well as being white over a
dark background to make sure it is well seen and
noticeable by the reader.
The large font size carries over to the short piece
of text to know that it is part of the same story and
to give you that additional information. Here it is
giving you the mothers age.
The imagery is hugely
important to the front cover
as not only does it help
cover white space, it
makes is look that much
more aesthetically
pleasing.
The style differs from the
Daily Mail as this focus’ on
a wide range of stories for
the front page and offers
page numbers to refer to.
Suitable images for production
Possibly use an image with Piers
having his thumb up to indicate it
was the correct decision for him to
be fired.
Using images of Piers unhappy will help give the message forward with the
heading.
The image of Piers with the United Kingdom flag behind him could make a
good background image for the newspaper as the topic of him being fired is
in relation with British troops.
Possible Headlines
Auf Wiedersehen, Piers
This could be used in relation to Piers and his 1996 front cover of the Mirror.
“Achtung surrender!” When Germany were about to play England in the Euro
96’- He was later made to apologise.
Possibly something more simplistic, ‘Piers Morgan Fired’ for tabloids such as
the Daily Mail.
Like the use of the headline Auf Wiedersehen (Goodbye in German), a similar
approach could be to use puns.
This would be for papers such as The Sun who target a much more working
class demographic and are less formal.
‘Falling to Pierces’
This could be a possible headline as it incorporates the idea of being sacked
and the use of Piers replacing piece can help engage the reader.
Experimental stage (Font Selection)
1)Auf Wiedersehen,
Piers
2)Auf Wiedersehen,
Piers
3)Auf Wiedersehen,
Piers
4)Piers Morgan FIRED
5)Piers
Morgan
FIRED
6)Piers
Morgan
FIRED
1) Charlemagne Std
2) Perpetua Titling MT
Light
3) Adobe Std B
4) Calibri
5) Century
6) Helvetica Light
7) Comic Sans MS
8) Times New Roman
9) KufiStandardGK
7)Falling to Pierces
8) Falling to
Pierces
9)Falling to
Pierces
Flat plan (1)
Masthead Advert 1
Main headline
Image to support
headline
Advert 2
Another story
This would be for a
newspaper where more than
one story is featured on the
front page.
There would be enough
room for advertisements to
feature around the edges of
the cover.
Having a small piece on the
article is a good way of
engaging the reader early
and then including a page
number for them to read
additional information.
The image would not be
huge but still large enough to
stand out and grab attention.
Having alternative stories
can offer much more to the
consumer.
Small piece of text
on article
Another story
Advert or
competition.
Flat plan (2)
Official logo
Heading (Possibly underlined)
Piers Morgan
image
Bullet points on
article
Couple of
paragraphs on
article
Other
news
Have an image of Piers
Morgan covering the majority
of the front page.
Use a heading that will entice
the particular class that read
the tabloid.
Try out a range of sizes
(Experiment with fonts looked
at in previous slides)
Attempt to create own logo for ‘The Sun’ if they have
the correct font (Franklin Gothic Heavy Italicised)
Include something that blends
in with the other image and
adds more colour to the piece.
Include a short image or piece of text to support the
Piers Morgan article.
Include the start of the piece.
(Reference page number, keep
professional- have drop capitals
etc)
Have some bullet points with
extra information that adds to
the heading.
Produced on InDesign, this explores into creating a piece of work that can feature in the media and does not look
out of place.
Due to the Tabloid being relatively brief in the text content on the front page, the work created in previous tasks
could not be shown to its full detail.
However, the creation of this first cover is very professional and keeps to the house style of the specific paper here
which is The Sun. Including other news and adverts as well as the main logo makes it that much more believable.
During the planning stage I was able to understand what
content was needed in order to make a front cover
successful.
The inclusion of the ‘Now only 30p’ was something so small it
could be seen as insignificant, however it adds to the overall
aesthetic look.
The bullet points are somewhat of a house style in relation to
The Sun and the composition within the front page.
The Times New Roman heading was explored into during the
planning stage for the fonts and was seen as a very suitable
choice due to the serious topic.
The other news such as the football image was just to add to
the look and make the text that much more visually pleasing.
The use of different text colours, sizes and underlining makes
the page stand out and easily readable for the customer.
The small aspects that add a lot to the work are the addition
of page numbers and references.
This as well as the competition on the top right gives the
paper that extra attraction than it normally would and an
incentive to purchase this newspaper over another.
Developing the idea
Removing the white space was important and making
sure everything was readable.
The use of the dark background created on
Photoshop helped bring out the white text much
more.
The use of further imagery such as Andrew Neil, a
fellow editor added to the story and started to
construct a much stronger piece of work.
Keeping in the house style was important and retaining
certain aspects such as the red bullet points and the text
being in a large white font covering over a very large
image.
The Sun logo was created upon in Photoshop and made to
incorporate the price in so it was very clear.
Final Product
Here Is the final design for the tabloid front cover. The text has been slightly lost due to the JPEG being created in
order to show this on the PowerPoint. From this you can draw some comparisons to the design of The Sun
newspaper and also see how I have tried to explore something different in the way the information is presented.
The advertisements that are usually seen on products such as these have been retained as during the planning
stage I found this to be a huge aspect. I have decided to focus on the one story rather than multiple because during
the planning stage I found various big headline articles that did the same.
The death of Margret Thatcher being one of them. The Image covered the majority of the front cover with the most
part of the content being in relation to that topic.
The inclusion of the sports at the foot of the page brings out the tabloid
side of the product.
The headline had to be large and grab attention, and I believe it has
done so.
The colours and imagery had to stand out but also compliment each
other, this has also been done in a professional manner.
The use of small house style’s such as the red bullet points and the
large underlined Arial heading made it keep with the consistency of the
product and almost believable.
The logo of The Sun was harder to replicate and through Photoshop it
was adjusted to look similar.
Including incentives to buy this paper over other competitors was
something that almost if not every paper has. This is why I made sure
to bring this idea forward.
The price of the paper was something which I found to be vital. Keeping
the ‘40p’ bold and bright made sure it was impossible to not notice.
The inclusion of the word ‘FREE’ provided that incentive for the reader. The holiday and theme park images created
that offer to the reader that for only 40p seemed a good deal.
The money aspect was something I wanted to keep on the newspaper as in the planning stage I found many tabloid
papers with huge prices on the covers for all sorts of advertisements.
Advertising The Sun’s own ‘Dream Team’ was something good that I wanted to include. After importing the image into
Photoshop I was able to Rotoscope it and change the background colour to suit this tabloid.
Placing the dream team in the football section at the foot of the cover was a great place for that audience to notice it
more.
With the £500,000 being in large yellow text, this again made it impossible to not notice.
This yellow text was something I wanted to keep in cover with three aspects containing it. The article on the main story itself was produced in a clear and
concise manner by keeping to the style of the specific tabloid.
By including the red bullet points and retaining the short sub-
headings, this gave that much more clarity to the work and
supported the headline itself.
The pun in the title was in order to grab the readers attention and
again, keep within the target audience.
Using the drop capital on the short piece gave that professional look
to the work.
Having page references again add to the idea of promoting the the
paper. Including many aspects to entice the reader to buying the
product.
The ‘Exclusive’ interview provides that unique look to the paper and
that of something no other paper has. This enhances the work and
makes that that much more stronger.
The use of ‘Britain’s most popular paper’ is telling the reader to
purchase the paper by reputation alone and reassure them that
many others will be buying this product.
Magazine
These are articles taken from Time Magazine.
They focus on six column grid.
Most magazines in relation to Piers Morgan and more
important information focus on having more text than
imagery.
To split the text and make it easier to reader the images are
used as well as the different colours.
The cover is very clear and concise. The information needed
is on and nothing more. No advertisements or sales.
A very professional magazine.
This is reflected in the design of the articles. Using large amounts of text suggest that this targets a much more
middle to higher class demographic and will use very formal language in contrast to The Sun and other various
tabloids.
The information in these pieces will be very detailed and explore more into the topic, perhaps even more truthful
than the tabloid papers.
When designing the magazine for the product, the design needs to be taken into account. It has to be much more
organised and clear. It cannot be condensed like the tabloid covers.
The images used on
the double page
spreads are very
relevant to the topic
and keep in the
same style
throughout.
The house style of
Time Magazine is
important to
replicate, such as
the font, style and
colour.
Piers Morgan Fired (Franklin Gothic)
Exploring into this font is important as this is used in the front cover of Time
Magazine.
‘TIME’ itself is not a font , it is a custom logo for the magazine. The fonts
used on the cover can differ, however the layout needs to remain intact.
There was a redesign into the fonts used by TIME magazine.
In February of 2009 they were told that the size of the
magazine was being reduced by 9 percent
It was from this where they wanted to increase the layout
inside to have larger headlines and therefore remove text on
articles.The 3 fonts now used in TIME Magazine are LYON, NYTE, KNOCKOUT.
Designed by Dino dos Santos for the serif
display.
Designed by Hoefler & Frere-Jones
“We were attracted to Lyon because it's well drawn, very legible and nice to
look at, but also slightly more condensed than our previous body copy,
which in turn allows for more words per line (very beneficial when your page
shrinks).
For our serif display we chose a font called Esta for its versatility and had
the designer (Dino dos Santos) draw several more weights and customize
some of the characters.
He renamed our version of the font Nyte. Having a versatile serif face is key
for us because we cover such a broad range of topics.
Finally, we chose Knockout. We wanted a face that would help us give our
cover and interior headlines more impact. Knockout is a condensed face,
allowing for larger display. It also has a nice variety of weights, which helps
make it a great workhorse font”.
When looking into the design for the magazine, these fonts could be
used in order to make it look much more professional.
Using the same house style will make it believable also.
Design Director Arem Duplessis was the reason behind the change in font.
Possible images for magazine spread.Here are images that could be used for the
magazine double page spread on Piers
Morgan.
They all share similarities in the fact they
are looking towards the camera. Something
I wanted to recreate in this piece about him
for TIME.
These images are taken from different
stages in Piers Morgans career.This allows me to
create different articles
on him and reproduce
work from various
earlier tasks.
Seen as this is an
American magazine.
Having Piers Morgan
being fired by the Daily
Mirror would not be
something the
audience would be
interested in.
Therefore, choosing a
more recent image
such as the one
furthest to the right will
be a better choice.
Writing about Piers
Morgan overall,
including his CNN
career would provide a
much better read.
Flat
plans
Have a image of Piers Morgan to
support the text and make it easier
to digest.
1
Keep to the
house style
of having 6
columns of
text.
2
3
4 5
6
Another
image to
support the
text.
(2)
1
Keep to the
house style
of having 6
columns of
text.
2
3
4 5
6
Smaller
image to
support the
text.
Perhaps have image higher up with
captions instead of a headline.
(3)
Perhaps include the image in
the centre of a double page
spread and have text
surrounding it.
1 2
4
5 6
3
Here I used the previous task of the interview in order to produce something that looks
similar to a magazine. Using professional tools in both Photoshop and InDesign
allowed me to add all the content.
The Rotoscope and Magic wand tools helped remove the background of the imagery,
this helped the text go around and look of a higher standard. The drop capital is also
used to add to the text.