Monday 16 December 2013

What Are The Conventions Of A Magazine?

One convention of a magazine is a headline. This is a text written at the very top of an article which indicates to the audience what the nature of the article is about.
Another convention is a strapline is a te or phase that is short and memorable. This makes it good for marketing and it catches alot of customer attention.
One other convention of a magazine is a masthead. This is a text written in a large font across the front cover, usually seen on the editional page of the item.
Another convention is a cutline. This is a one line text describing the illustration, drawing or photograph next to where it appears.
One other convention is pull quote. This a phase which is cut out of a article and placed in a larger font to attract  readers.
One final magazine convention is an image. This is an illustration which is used to pass a clear view of article.

There is generally always a colour theme on a music magazine based on which genre it is. For example, a rock magazine like "Kerrang" may used red, black and white, whereas a pop magazine like "Top of the Pops" would use light colours like pink, purple and white. Though for any genre there are only ever a few colours used.

The layout of a magazine is also an important convention. Most magazines follow the typical conventions. One typical layout convention is the masthead which is usually displayed at the top left corner due to the way our eyes work when looking at things that is where we would first look. Also by the masthead the date and issue number are found. Another is price which is based generall by the barcode which usually is on the right hand bottom corner. Other things such as coverlines, straplines and taglines are dotted around on the cover where they look good in puffs or just by themselves.

There are some influences that change the mode of address in a music magazine, these are genre, target audience and format of magazine.

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