Yearbook Vocabulary

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Across
  1. 2. edition number, and printing specifications (size, paper weight, etc.)
  2. 5. Example: Pages 1 and 2: blank page, title page; Pages 3 and 4: Letter from the Editor, Table of Contents; Pages 5 and 6: Yearbook Dedication.
  3. 9. font: A font that has “feet” coming off the letters. Example: Times New Roman is a serif font.
  4. 14. The feeling of the yearbook. Words you would use to describe your yearbook.
  5. 16. project, cafeteria food stats, and students with matching cars.
  6. 21. coverage: Formatting the yearbook based on categories. Example: all athletics are in one section,
  7. 23. A tool used to help plan out pages, sections, and content order. A ladder can be on paper or
  8. 25. pages: Pages that introduce the next section of the book. They can be as simple as a full spread picture and
  9. 26. a spread represents the week September 23rd-28th and includes coverage of Homecoming, an art exhibit, a
  10. 27. spine: When your book is closed, the edge of the book that binds the pages together. On a yearbook, the spine
Down
  1. 1. or similar. The spread before the spring section starts.
  2. 3. theme.
  3. 4. Serif font: A font that has no “feet” coming off of the letters. Example: Arial font is a sans serif font.
  4. 6. A statement at the end of the book that includes information such as staff names, printer name, printing
  5. 7. the theme and include the table of contents.
  6. 8. has information such as the volume number, school name, yearbook name, and year.
  7. 10. The paper betweent the cover and the first page. It is often used for signing, but can also be used to help
  8. 11. or as complex as multiple pictures and quotes. Example: The spread before the athletics section starts, with the title
  9. 12. The central idea of the yearbook. A concept that drives the look, feel, content, and photograph style of the
  10. 13. order is not required in each section.
  11. 15. One story and picture grouping within a page or spread. Each spread is typically broken down into smaller
  12. 17. volume number, year, school address, school phone number, etc.
  13. 18. When a book is open, the two facing pages create a spread.
  14. 19. Each module focuses on a specific story. Ex: One game on a spread about the baseball season.
  15. 20. coverage: Formatting the yearbook in a chronological order. All categories are mixed together.
  16. 22. page: The first page of your yearbook. Includes information like the theme, title of your yearbook, school
  17. 24. A design, graphic, image, text, or similar that repeats on every page of your yearbook. Your folio helps emphasize