Across
- 2. The layout is the template for your pages. It organizes all your design elements so that you can place them later.
- 3. Try to mix up elements and sizes of photos on your page to create contrast and variety, increasing reader appeal.
- 5. A single page of content with the opposite page featuring a different, yet often related topic.
- 8. By using columns and guides, your pages will be uniform and even.
- 11. Line All critical information must be placed inside the trim line. Any elements that cross this line "bleed" off the edge of the page.
- 12. Space
- 13. spread Two facing pages telling a story.
- 14. The heavy paper between the cover and the first and last pages is used to hold the signatures in the yearbook.
- 16. Space Planned open space on a page used to frame or otherwise highlight content.
- 17. Number Also called, folio or page folio they provide a specific quick reference for readers.
- 18. The name of the author(s) of the spread/page/mod.
Down
- 1. Accompanies the primary headline. It is short and catchy, and offers specific information and added details about the story subject.
- 4. (mini-booklet) begins as a giant sheet of paper with eight pages printed on each side, forming 16 consecutive pages.
- 6. The spine of the yearbook, where the left page meets the right page.
- 7. Introduces the reader to the page by summarizing the story of the page or highlighting its focus.
- 9. This is the invisible (or white space created) line that runs across the DPS, helping connect the two pages and keeping the reader's visual flow.
- 10. Each page should have a dominant element on the design. This may be a photo or a connected group of photos.
- 15. A unit of measurement in yearbook.
