The masthead of the magazine cover stands out brightly against the black and white color scheme. It helps readers identify important parts like artist names. The masthead is placed behind the artists to show their importance. The magazine cover breaks conventions by not following the rule of thirds, promoting a rebellious attitude aligned with the band featured. The band's name "Nirvana" contrasts strongly with the background through size and color to differentiate it as the most important part. The band's ideology and time period are reflected in the black and white photo from the 1980s-1990s era of free will they came from. Short flashes throughout provide quick previews of stories without taking up much space.
The document describes the design choices made for a magazine cover and contents page focusing on the grime music genre. References are made to existing magazines like RWD, Vibe, and Flavour that were analyzed for conventions. The cover uses a large central image of a model and large text following conventions seen in referenced magazines. The contents page lists artist interviews and features with a logo and color scheme consistent with the magazine brand and genre.
Super short presentation of EOD - eBooks on Demand project at national and university library in Slovenia. / Kratka predstavitev evropskega projekta EOD - e-knjige po naro?ilu.
Presented by Matija Brumen at Hotel Slon on the occasion of 5ft Conference of Sections for special and university librares of Sloveian Library Association with working title Challenges of modern technologies: advantages of libraries.
Q magazine uses its logo consistently to identify magazine sections like contents and reviews. NME highlights important information in red to catch readers' attention without using red for the whole page. An image on the magazine covers most of the page and shows the band standing on a hill, providing insight into their personal lives and backgrounds rather than just a typical studio photo. Q magazine uses golden text in a different font style to draw readers' eyes rather than to explicitly demand attention. NME deliberately uses yellow text to psychologically influence readers into making decisions by coloring decision-related words like "subscribe" and "call" since yellow helps people make decisions. The page design uses simple colors with specific colors used for specific elements, with red used to distinguish
Super short presentation of EOD - eBooks on Demand project at national and university library in Slovenia. / Kratka predstavitev evropskega projekta EOD - e-knjige po naro?ilu.
Presented by Matija Brumen at Hotel Slon on the occasion of 5ft Conference of Sections for special and university librares of Sloveian Library Association with working title Challenges of modern technologies: advantages of libraries.
Q magazine uses its logo consistently to identify magazine sections like contents and reviews. NME highlights important information in red to catch readers' attention without using red for the whole page. An image on the magazine covers most of the page and shows the band standing on a hill, providing insight into their personal lives and backgrounds rather than just a typical studio photo. Q magazine uses golden text in a different font style to draw readers' eyes rather than to explicitly demand attention. NME deliberately uses yellow text to psychologically influence readers into making decisions by coloring decision-related words like "subscribe" and "call" since yellow helps people make decisions. The page design uses simple colors with specific colors used for specific elements, with red used to distinguish
The document describes a specialized college program at Inwen University of Science and Technology.
[U] The College of Humanities and Design offers a program called "Integration of Images and Languages" taught in under 50% English. The program aims to develop shared skills through combining humanities and design. It includes core courses on language and culture, contemporary art, integration of images and languages, and practical projects. These courses promote using images and language interaction through case analysis and collaborative creative projects to experience and develop local cultural creativity.
This document provides information about special programs at Inwen University of Science and Technology. It includes the name of the program in Chinese and English, the percentage of courses taught in English, and descriptions of two programs - one in the integration of images and languages, and the other an introduction to English and American literature with over 90% of courses taught in English. The descriptions provide details on the goals and activities involved in each program to develop students' interdisciplinary and analytical skills through projects, discussions, and exposure to literary works from Britain and America.