
The main feature is a large square surrounded by smaller squares. The top square being the largest draws the most attention to it which shows it is the main story which needs the most attention. The image is the band biffy clyro; the lead singer is in a pose that connotes flamboyance and showing off and we can gather he is saying ‘look at me’ with that pose which connotes the ego of famous people and suits being a main image in a magazine.
The colours are black, white and yellow. The font is the same as the front cover which relates the two as does the colour scheme. The black and white indicates the rock and roll world as dark and mysterious yet the yellow brings vibrance to the page which attracts the reader and disguises the pages to the reader so they can go straight to the relevant page to the topic they wish to read.
This contents page is very neat and organised; there is nothing to confuse you and every picture has an anchorage text.
There is a promotion on the page about getting the magazine delivered to your door, it denotes the company has the customer’s convenience in mind and the promotion being red is eye catching so the readers attention goes to the promotion as it differs from the colour scheme which implies that this promotion needs attention and it is important which is why it has to be a different colour.
At the top left hand corner they have a small image of the front cover to remind the reader of the name of the magazine as well as a short paragraph introducing this week’s magazine, this is also present In the contents page to link the front cover and contents page together. The logo isn’t present on the page as a logo steals attention away from the stories and promotion, this implies how the magazine values there stories more than the logo and think the stories is the best thing to focus the readers attention on. Also because the colour scheme and font ties in with the front cover there is no need to link the two using a logo. Kerrang keeps their pages cohesive by the colour scheme and font and also the square images; this shows that they are organised and united.
The colours are black, white and yellow. The font is the same as the front cover which relates the two as does the colour scheme. The black and white indicates the rock and roll world as dark and mysterious yet the yellow brings vibrance to the page which attracts the reader and disguises the pages to the reader so they can go straight to the relevant page to the topic they wish to read.
This contents page is very neat and organised; there is nothing to confuse you and every picture has an anchorage text.
There is a promotion on the page about getting the magazine delivered to your door, it denotes the company has the customer’s convenience in mind and the promotion being red is eye catching so the readers attention goes to the promotion as it differs from the colour scheme which implies that this promotion needs attention and it is important which is why it has to be a different colour.
At the top left hand corner they have a small image of the front cover to remind the reader of the name of the magazine as well as a short paragraph introducing this week’s magazine, this is also present In the contents page to link the front cover and contents page together. The logo isn’t present on the page as a logo steals attention away from the stories and promotion, this implies how the magazine values there stories more than the logo and think the stories is the best thing to focus the readers attention on. Also because the colour scheme and font ties in with the front cover there is no need to link the two using a logo. Kerrang keeps their pages cohesive by the colour scheme and font and also the square images; this shows that they are organised and united.
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