My preliminary task turned out to be a complete contrast to my final piece now. My front cover looked very unprofessional and where I thought I was making it fun and appealing, it wasn’t. Instead of having an image where it filled the page, I had a coloured background with photos and text randomly placed. It looks very untidy and I had used too any different fonts for different stories on just the front cover. Where I had made it on PowerPoint I had very little that I could do with manipulations to the photos and texts as well as shapes and organising. For my final piece however I used various tools and techniques in Photoshop to maximise the potential my magazines front cover had. I increased the brightness and contrast on the photo and increased the vibrancy on the colour so it would stand out on the page and wow people. I have learnt through this that the layout on the front cover is extremely important crucial, without it people wont be attracted and will feel no interest to look.
For my contents page from preliminary, I had used purple and blue, completely contrasting ad contradicting the yellow and green theme from the front cover. I again had completed this on PowerPoint so it was unprofessional in many ways. I used again too many fonts and the layout was atrocious. I had to block colours and then extremely dull images. Arrows over lap the images and come from the page numbers, its messy and has no structure. The page numbers are all one after the other and have boring headings with no content underneath to explain what is within the article. When actually completing my final piece of contents page, I realised how important it was to include such little details, like having a small block colour underneath the subheadings to make the headings stand out more and have the page more bright and bold to look at. I found that having the date, issue number, website and the title in the same font didn’t make it look bland, it made I look professional rather than having scribbly writing.
My sketch of my double page spread was completely different to how I ended up setting it out in my final piece. I had a group coming across the 2 pages slightly and having a quote as the title. Instead I used the artists name as the title and instead of having a group of 4 shot I had a single picture of a girl on the left hand page and an interview text on the right. I stuck to my sketch and have 3 columns, I experimented with 2 and 4 to see how it looked, but it look like too much or too less so 3 was perfect. As I was finishing it I reminded myself about the little details that made up the entire picture. Having a rounded off line underneath the image and underneath the text made the page look more professional and neater. Having the page number, logo for the magazine and the website details underneath too all added to create a neatened double page spread.




