Key Terms




Term
Explanation
advertorial

Advertising material that is designed to look like editorial. In the UK, this is covered by a BSME code of practice and must be labelled as 'advertising promotion'
audience
The people that you want to reach.
bleed
Printed matter that extends beyond the trimmed edge of a page. The bleed area is usually 3mm beyond the trimmed size of a page
body copy
main text on a page
byline
The headline and text of a second less important story in a magazine or paper.
classified advertising
Advertising sold by the line or column centimetre (as opposed to display advertising). Adverts grouped according to content.
Caption/anchorage
An explanation of a photo or diagram.
coverline
Gives more information about the headline and article – used to make you read on.
cover mount
A gift stuck to a magazine's front cover
display advertising
Large adverts, usually sold in multiples of quarter to full page
editorial
An opinion from a publisher or editor about a topic of interest
feature Article
The main article advertised on a front cover of a magazine, or the main article in a spread.
font
A set of type characters, numbers and punctuation marks, in one face and size.
gutter
Gap between columns of text or around the text area of a page.
Graphic feature
Use of graphics to enhance the look – boxes, borders, shapes etc.
header
Information line at the top of a page.
headline
A headline is text at the top of a newspaper article, indicating the nature of the article below it.
lead
Beginning of a news story, generally contains who, what, when, where, and why
main picture
The biggest and most eye catching picture – often linked to the feature article.

masthead
The name of a publication traditionally printed at the top of the first editorial page, often as a logo and often accompanied by issue number and date
puff or starburst
Attention-grabbing panel, so-called because originally words put on star-shaped background.
puff piece
A flattering piece of copy about a person, usually very biased
pug
Top part/"ears" of newspaper at the top left and right-hand corners of the paper (aka "ears" of the page). Can contain the price of the paper, a logo or a promotion.
pull quote
Phrase or sentence taken from an article and used to attract a reader's attention by setting it in a larger type size
sidebar
Short article related to main topic on page, usually in a box or given a special typographical treatment
Strapline
A thin band across the bottom of a magazine front cover previewing what is inside.
Skyline
The same as a strapline, but at the top!

Comments

  1. Ensure that you are confident with the key terms, they will be very useful when completing the exam section.

    Where is your annotated front cover?

    ReplyDelete

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