Transcript Slide 1

Yearbook Bingo
Fill in your squares with these words.
When I show the parts of the yearbook, place a
goldfish on your bingo sheet.
gutter
margins
spread
bleed
spine
Folio
Polls
process color
folio tab
headline
Subheadline
Placeholder text
copy
caption
signature
colophon
folio tab
theme
ladder
end sheets
TOC
spine
section dividers
What is a
No, it’s not jelly or jam. It is two facing
side-by-side pages in the yearbook such
as 2 and 3, 4 and 5, etc.
What is a
It’s a verbal statement and a visual look
which tie all parts of the yearbook
together. It should fit with our school and
our year.
What is a
•
•
•
•
•
This is our roadmap to knowing what we will
cover in the yearbook. It defines:
The number of photos on the spread
Whether the page is CMYK (cyan, magenta,
yellow, black) or a black and white page
Who is assigned to work and complete the
spread
What copy needs to be added
What the focus of the page will be
What are the
These are attached to the front and back
cover. Often we print on them – for
example our Table of Contents (TOC).
What is a
These are the page numbers that often
include a small image that uses the theme
of the book.
What is the
After our ladder is complete we can
decide which parts of the book are
divisions? This is printed on our end
sheets.
What are these called
Title Page
Opening – We make it happen
Summer – We play
Fall – We arrive
Winter – We succeed
Portrait Pages by grade levels – We make a
difference
Spring – We conquer
Clubs& Organizations – We
What is the
This is the skinny part of the outside of
the book where the front meets the back.
We have to tell the publisher what we
want on the spine.
Usually the spine includes the name of
our yearbook and the year. This year is
volume 20.
What is a
These are counted in groups of 16 pages
on our ladder. These pages are ones that
are printed at the same time—meaning
the pages when folded out as a spread are
actually one page.
What is the
This is generally the last page of the
book—before the index–and lists the
managing editors, staff editors, and all
staff who helped publish the yearbook—
that’s YOU! And it IS a JOB, but so
worth it! It explains what fonts we used
and how we developed the theme.
What is
This uses the four colors – Cyan, Magenta,
Yellow, and Black (CMYK) in varying degrees
to produce color like you see in a magazine. It’s
like picking out the color you want to paint
your room. You look at swatches and choose!
What is a
This come before the copy to attract the
reader’s attention and are the largest font on
the page.
Crossing the line
You’ve been set up
Where the wild things are
Act your age
What is
This looks like gibberish or a foreign language.
We use it so we will know that copy or captions
go in that place.
What are
These are surveys that we conduct with
at least 4 advisories (so we have at least
100 students participating).
Ideas might be:
What’s sports drink do you enjoy during a
game?
What apps are on your phone?
Yearbookers
We have so little time to learn so
much before our first deadline!
1. We will learn to interview next week.
2. The following week we will learn
InDesign.
3. We will have a font project – the font
fight on Halloween to learn about serif
and sans serif fonts.
4. You will learn to write copy and
captions.
Remember
It’s the DETAILS that count.
Your photos MUST tell stories!
Your stories must paint pictures!
Our learning GOAL is
SCUCFI
So close you can feel it photography!
We have to see the blood, sweat and tears.
BEATS & the LADDER
You have a beat. Make
sure you take photos of
club and after school
events and check the web
calendar soon. Keep track
of scores, etc. and players
that are in the forefront of
the games.