Layout Lingo
Anatomy of a Spread
Visual Appeal
Laying out a spread- tell what step # it is
Adding Graphic Touches
Potpourri
100

This is two pages side by side. This is designed so that both pages match because people look at them together.

What is a spread?

100

The Photographs that show people doing things

What are action photos?

100

The dominant photo is usually this because it pulls the reader’s eyes into the rest of the spread before any other element on the spread


What is the CVI or centre of visual impact?

100

Step back from your sheet or preview your page so you can see what your actual spread will look like.

 What is step 6 or the last step?

100

Blocks of colour that can be used to set apart elements of a layout

What are screens?

100

Areas of the page with nothing on it that are put there on purpose


What is planned white space?

200

These are the tiny boxes that you use to evenly space the things you place on your page or spread

What are picas?

200

A headline that is at least 48 point font and is a play on words with the theme


What is a primary headline?

200

Other things on the page that hook the eye of the reader like dropcaps, labels, logos, enlarged quotes and good headlines


What are reader entry points?

200

Make sure your page is set up correctly, you know and can see the number of columns you will use and that you have a grid to work with.


What is step 1?

200

This uses 4 types of inks: cyan, magenta, yellow and black. Any shade is possible with the exception of metallics.

What is four colour or process colour printing?

200

The main write-up on the page or spread that explains what the page is all about

What is body copy?

300

The middle of a spread where the pages are bound together

What is the gutter?

300

It should be 2.5 times larger than the rest of your photos and it should be your best photo


What is the dominant photo?

300

Because the two pages of the spread are viewed together, this must be used to connect both sides.

What is spread linkage?

300

Place your dominant photo. Then place other photos around the dominant photo. (Hint: This is 2 steps of the process!)

What is step 2 & 3?

300

The small images and text at the bottom of each page that tell you what section of the book you’re in


What is the folio?

300

Headlines that add specific information of several lines and are 14-16 font type


What are secondary headlines?

400

The large sheets of paper that are folded into 16 page booklets in order to make the yearbook


What is a signature?

400

A small write-up that explains more about what is shown in a photo. Every photo must have one.

What is a caption?

400

Thinking of your page as vertical strips and using them to avoid trapped white space


What is columnar design?

400

Place your captions around the outside of your spread, with each caption next to the photo it describes.


What is step 4?

400

Boxes or lines that can enclose text and can be made different sizes. They can be made from dingbats, dots, boxes and dashes too.


What are rule lines?

400

Photos that extend one pica past the outside of the page

What is the bleed line?

500

The 8th and 9th pages in a signature and the only two pages in the signature that are actually printed together

What is the natural spread?

500

A line that goes horizontally across the entire spread and NEVER is in the middle of the page

What is the eyeline?

500

The number of picas that your interior margins should be set at when setting up your columnar design?

 What is one pica?

500

Place your headlines and copy.


What is step 5?

500

The thing that can differ between how it looks on your computer screen and how it looks when it is printed


What is colour?

500

The white space on the outside of a spread

What are exterior margins?

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