Yearbook Terms
Across
- 4. Editing the image area to be reproduced.
- 8. A traditional-story approach packed with facts, figures, descriptive details, specific examples, quotes and poignant anecdotes.
- 9. A credit line at the beginning or end of a story giving the name of the writer.
- 11. A grouping of pages that are printed on the same press sheet and folded into a 16-page mini-booklet
- 12. PHOTO Photos that are captured without posing your subjects or distracting them from what they’re doing.
- 13. The first page of the yearbook makes a positive first impression and provides critical reference information.
- 15. Finishes the story of the year and brings the yearbook to closure.
- 18. A central idea or concept that sets the tone for telling the story of the year.
- 19. Indicates a new section and provides design continuity throughout.
- 20. The large type designed to attract readers to stories and draw them into the spread.
- 22. Master pages that maintain consistency within a design or section.
- 23. A survey or voting activity conducted by the staff to gather student opinions, select superlatives, and capture memories, which are then published in the book.
- 26. Introduces the story of the year and explains the yearbook’s concept. Includes the title page and the first spread(s) of the yearbook.
- 27. A reader service that lists the staff, acknowledgements, printing specifications, awards and press association memberships.
- 28. The date that completed yearbook pages are due.
Down
- 1. An imaginary, horizontal band of 1-pica spacing used as a unifying device.
- 2. The final, critical step of checking page proofs (layouts) for errors in spelling, grammar, punctuation, and, most importantly, the accuracy of names and photo captions before the book is printed.
- 3. An alphabetical directory of every person, team, group, advertiser and topic featured in the words and photos on the pages of a yearbook.
- 5. A credit line underneath a photo or as part of the caption giving the name of the photographer.
- 6. Two pages that face each other in a yearbook; even and odd pages appearing as a unit.
- 7. Eight pages on one side of a press sheet.
- 10. A page-by-page planner and deadline tracker used to identify content, record deadlines, plan color placement and track pages submitted and proofed.
- 14. A one-on-one question and answer session with a person closely associated with an event, activity or topic.
- 16. Covers activities in and out of school that directly impact students’ lives.
- 17. The heavy paper between the cover and the first and last pages that helps hold the inside pages into the cover.
- 21. Text accompanying a photo that adds information.
- 24. A unit of measurement in graphic design equal to one-sixth of a inch, used for measuring the width and height of content elements.
- 25. extra space around your page that is intentionally printed, then trimmed by the printer.
- 27. Words written in a variety of formats to tell a story. Also called a story or article.