Looking back at your preliminary task, what do you feel you have learnt in the progression from it to the full project?I learned and experienced many things in the preliminary task which I was able to develop in order to achieve a success regarding my main task.
Planning and Preparation
I found this first section the most important in relation to being able to attempt a detailed, professional looking magazine cover/contents page/double page spread.
The start of my planning involved research into other magazines. I researched into one magazine that was not of my chosen genre of rock (being R&B) and two that did match my genre (being Kerrang and NME). From the analysis of these magazines, I found that:
- All music magazines have a certain colour scheme which is consistent throughout the magazine.
- The language is informal in all these magazines.
- The photos are often of young men (particularly in from my chosen genre).
- These young men are dressed down (in sneakers, baggy low-waist genes etc).
- There is almost always a subscription section on the bottom of all the contents pages.
In planning, I had to look mainly at the audience's needs and find/work out every little detail about them. As I planned to make a rock magazine, I needed to find details about my audience in regardance to their lifestyle, psychographic/demographic and where they would be on the jicnars scale. I found this out from the research which I carried out on magazines.
Also, I made a collage for my young audience and posted it on Facebook with a set of questions underneath asking what interested them about the pictures/items on there etc, and tagged members of my targeted audience for them to comment on it. The results were a success and it proved that the things which I thought suitable for a young generation, in actual fact, was.
The preparation involved creating a detailed audience profile which I worked out from all my previous research. This shows how essential my research/preparation actually was.
I then drafted out my magazine's cover/contents/double page spread. By drawing it all out before I actually started making the magazine enabled me to make my magazine quicker to make, more efficiently without hardly any faults.
I have learnt how valuable it is to plan, research and prepare, as it kept me on track and made my magazine become a success, by having all of my plans prepared beforehand.
Organisation of Time
In order to produce a magazine that was successfully produced and up to a good standard:
- I knew I needed to keep my deadline firmly in my head.
- To keep diciplined and commited to my schedual that I made.
- I realised that making a detailed time plan was a valuble thing, because it kept me organised and on top of my work.
- I do not think that I would have achieved a magazine that matched most of the drafts, without a detailed time plan being made before.
The Location:
The setting for my photos were in my opinion, the most essential to making my images work. The genre to my magazine was rock, and so therefore I had to make sure that I could connote and express this through location. I used brick walls and fences, as to where my main settings were in the end, because I decided that these places set up the foundations basis for my photoshoot.
The Lighting:
The lighting was one of the key concepts to making the photos effective and catchy. I realised that I liked to play with contrast consisting of the various amount of light which I included in the pictures. When editing, I found that contrast was only proved to be valuble depending on the conditions of the light.
The costume:
I made sure that my models dressed 'down,' and followed the stereotypical concepts of 'rock music followers.' As from my previous research, I realised that this consisted of piercings, low-waisted baggy jeans, sweat band,s beanies etc... Therefore I made my models wear these things, and from my targeted audience reactions, it attracted the right attention from my chosen audience - because they could identify with it.
Also, I involved the use of props, regarding guitars/microphones etc... to help portray the genre which I aimed to get across. For example, electric guitars are symbolic to rock, and denote as that.
The Conventions:
I used conventions of magazine front covers/contents pages/double page spreads to make my resulting media product successful. I decided to follow the convetions that I found in every magazine I researched before I made my own magazine.
These consisted of:
- Tables/columns/grids.
- Bar codes/pricing/mastheads/skylines etc.
- Informal or formal language - and only to stick to one.
- A variety of photos.
- An editor's note.
- A freebie.
Photoshop, Quark Express and Lightroom were all needed to accomplish a professional looking magazine - in an attempt. I needed to learn the skills in order to make the best use of these programmes, but seeing as they were rather similar and simple to one another/to use - it did not take too long to produce. The use of these professional programmes showed that even amateurs can use the programmes and create a product with some professional aspects in it.
Awareness of Consideration for the Audience:
The more involved that I became in producing my magazine, made me consequently realise the extent as to which the audience manipulated the decisions which I made when:
- Researching - regarding what specific thing.
- Drafting - I gathered what I researched, and found that the most common conventions were because it was what the audience liked.
- Planning - I planned my magazine based on the conventions which my target audience liked.
- Producing - all the photos/topics/styles were for my target audience.
What I Learnt from this Project:
The biggest thing which I learnt from this project is how important it is to plan a project before you actually start producing it. During my drafting and planning stages, I did not think that I actually would look back at it so much when producing my final magazine; however, I was wrong. I constantly looked back at my previous plans to make sure that I was structuring my pages in the right way, and that my pages followed the points which I made during the research stage of what attracts the target audience of mine. I believe that the drafting and planning stage helped me achieve my resulting magazine so efficiently.