In what ways does your media product use, develop or challenge forms and conventions of real media products?
For the newspaper pages, i took into account the following about the codes and conventions;
The Guardian:
1. The text is small and covers most of the page.
2. The text is a serif style (where the letters are more defined than normal san serif fonts)
3. The images on the page do not take up more than half of the page
2. The use of colour on the front pages is also very obvious, they use normally reds and blues as they stand out very well against white backgrounds.3. For the main feature, there is not alot of text, normally there is a large picture with the first paragraph of the article which continues inside the paper.
The Echo:
5. The main article will probably be about a local event that probably wouldn't get into any national papers.
I chose to combine the codes and conventions of mainly the local newspaper (The Echo) and the tabloid newspaper (The Sun). The codes that i used were;
- The main headline would be as large as the masthead.
- The adverts on my page is for a local establishment.
- I used a variety of colours on the page.
I developed the idea of a coloured masthead by changing the theme of mine. Most are just plain text in a box, however i made mine to look like a london road sign. This is challenging the normal codes and conventions of a masthead, as there are no mastheads that are made to look like something else.
For the website homepage, I noticed that all of the websites that i looked at had a similar layout. They all had one main picture with accompanying text, and a number of smaller pictures with text. On each website they also had the masthead at the top of the page. The one code that i changed was that the background of each website was white, i decided to make mine black, this is because i think that it made the boxes with text in stand out more.
How effective was your combination of the main product and the ancillary texts?
For my main text, i used the layout of a local newspaper, but i changed the style. I made it look alternative, and something that people would be more interested in buying it as it appears to be more exciting than other newspapers. I continued this style through into the ancillary texts. I used the same font for the headlines in the two newspaper pages, and the same font for the articles. I also adopted a colour scheme for all of the products, the colours that i used primarily were, white, black, dark red and grey, with the red coming from the masthead. I used the same fonts and colours throughout the project so that if people were to see the website and the newspaper, they would be able to make an immediate link. The colours that i chose are not bright, this could have made it boring, but the combination of the style of headlines and the brightly coloured pictures ensured that it did not look dull.
What have you learned from your audience feedback?
The first way in which i got feedback from the audience was when i did a survey of 20 people, male and female, aged 18 - 30. I asked two questions, the first was, 'What kind of newspaper so you read, broadsheet, tabloid or local?' 12 people (60%) said tabloid, 7 people said broadsheet (35%), and only 1 person (5%) said local newspaper. This made me realise that it could possibly be quite a hard task to make a local newspaper appeal to a younger age group. I then asked 'An increase in which of these would make you read your local newspaper more, music, sport, arts, events, or news?' 6 people (30%) said music, 6 people (30%) said events, 4 people (20%) said sports, 3 people (15%) said news, and 1 person (5%) said arts.
The results of this survey made it clear that if i wanted to make my newspaper appeal to a younger audience, i would have to focus more on music and events.
Throughout the project i asked for feedback a number of times to see how i could improve my products. I found that this helped me tweak the pages very easily and effectively as i was getting the opinions of people in the age group that i was targeting.
How did you use new media technologies in the construction and research, planning and evaluation stages?
The use of new media technologies was very apparent in my work. For the newspaper front page, I used Adobe InDesign, this is because i had learnt from previous work that this program was the best to creat text based publication due to the ease of use, and the column system which made the text layout almost perfect without editting it. I also used InDesign for the second page of the newspaper for the same reasons. For the production of my website, i used both Photoshop and Dreamweaver. I used Photoshop for the design part of it, this is because from previous experience, i learnt that this was a good program to use for image based and design work, with it being easy to make work aesthetically pleasing. I used Dreamweaver to put the website online, i had not used any web design software before, so i asked people who had experience in the area, and for ease of use they recommended this one. I used it to add links and rollovers, using the slice and hotspot tools. The last part of the project was to design a poster, and as with the website design, i used Photoshop, this is because i wanted to make the poster as visually appealing as possible to draw attention to it, making this program the most suitable.
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