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Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

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Page 1: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Beyond the Copy:The Look of the Page

Headlines, Layout & Design

Page 2: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Purpose of a HeadlineA headline must grab the

reader’s attention.

The headline must convey clear, concise thoughts.

It must be accurate in facts and tone.

Page 3: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Consider thisheadline--

•How does it grab the reader’s attention?

•What is accurate and what is misleading?

Page 4: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Tips for Writing HeadlinesRead the copy. Read through the whole thing

before you try to write a headline.

Think about the most important idea. That’s the idea you want to get across in your headline.

Take two key words from the copy– nouns that represent the main idea, especially the main action or result. Incorporate those into the headline.

Consider the space to fill. That affects the wording of the headline. Is it a banner headline? Does it have a subhead stacked under it?

Page 5: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Be Sure to Avoid:One word headlines – it looks like a

label instead of a headline.

Butting headlines together. This is known as tombstoning and can be very confusing to the reader.

Cliché headlines that don’t convey the facts in the copy.

Page 6: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

What’s Wrong With These?

Cliché is in bad taste

Confusing Word Choice

Page 7: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

What is wrong here?

Police chase winds through three towns

Dead cats protest

Clinic gives poor free legal help

Page 8: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

What is wrong here?

Police chase winds through three towns

Dead cats protest

Clinic gives poor free legal help

Winds is confusing: noun or verb?No verb –readers may make the noun protest into a verb

Is poor a noun or an adjective?

Page 9: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Newspaper Page LayoutsNewspaper pages contain: headlines, bylines,

copy, photographs, cutlines/captions, photo credits.

Old newspapers were in single column format. Not done today.

Terms:Black space=photosGray space=wordsWhite space=empty area

All items must be placed in an organized manner so that everything is clear to the reader. Avoid crowding elements or too much white space.

Page 10: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Yearbook Page LayoutsPages are viewed as double page spreads

(DPS). So pages must be consistent and complimentary.

Avoid placing words or photos across the gutter (the center binding area).

The arrangement of pages is organized in a ladder (the listing of pages).

Pages are printed as signatures: large sheets of paper, with 16 yearbook pages on each signature.

Page 11: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Dummy: A drawingthat represents a layout

Use columns to arrange the elements.

Stories are measured in column inches.

Photos are shown with an X.

Page 12: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Page Must Be Eye-Catching

This front page has only one story.

It has a boring layout with too many repetitive columns of text.

Does not draw reader into the paper.

Page 13: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Don’t Overload a Page

This page has no logical order.

Unclear which story the photo accompanies.

Too many columns

Need lines or boxing to separate stories clearly.

Page 14: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

Sample Yearbook DPSHas a headline.

Has a dominant photo

Uses white space to separate elements

Eye-catching design.

Has captions for all photos.

Page 15: Beyond the Copy: The Look of the Page Headlines, Layout & Design

RemindersEach page should have a dominant photo. It’s the

largest & most interesting. Mug shots are NOT dominant photos EVER.

Photos are the most important features on a yearbook page. Use eye-catching, action photos.

Font sizes:Headlines are in largest font size.Captions are in smallest font sizes.Copy needs to be a standard font and size, consistent

on all pages.

Use color and/or graphic elements to demonstrate the book’s theme.