Monday, May 2, 2016

VOCAB

Teaser- found on the front of the shield, leads the reader to a story
Flag- name of the newspaper, and where it's located
Folios- a line showing the page number, date, paper, and name
Bylines- the lines that say who wrote the article
Jumps- tells the reader where a story is continued
Story Dividers- any graphic element that brakes the story into parts
Screens- a light color over an entire article, can be grey or colored
Infographics- images that give information, (pie charts, bar graphs)
masthead/staff box- same as flag
bastard measure- Type set in a different width than the standard column measure
Raw wrap- when a story or headline might be bumped into, so they cut it short
Reefer- reference...basically.
Wild Art- the picture is good enough to go on the front..story not so much. Picture has caption to lead you to the story.
Pull Quote-key phrase, quotation, or excerpt that has been pulled from an article and used as a graphic element
Ears-Space at the top of the front page on each side of the newspaper's nameplate
Banner-headline extending across the width of a newspaper page, usually across the top of the front page
Kicker Headline-small headline just above the main one
Wicket Headline-headline design that consists of two or more lines of a secondary headline above one or more lines of a primary headline
Tripod Headline- headline style with a primary headline on the left covering two lines, next to lines of secondary headline
Hammer Headline- headline style that features one or more lines of primary headline above one or more lines of a secondary headline
Modular Design-style of design where all graphic elements are rectangular in shape and fit together cleanly and concisely.
Text Wrap-enables you to surround a picture or diagram with text
L-shape text flow- words go around the picture, when it is placed in a corner, creating an L
U-shape text flow- words go around the picture when it is placed in the center, creating an U

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