Across
- 3. Using type elements as design for headlines, copy, captions and graphics to project a desired image
- 6. Pages already set up in a design program, either by Walsworth or a staff’s designers, to be modified and saved by designers without affecting the original template
- 9. ____ ad Advertisement placed by parents or students rather than businesses
- 10. Page number on a yearbook spread; accompanying words or phrases identifying the content are called folio tabs
- 12. ___ cap The first letter of a paragraph enlarged to create a graphic effect
- 15. ___ Formula: Formula for writing captions
- 18. Body copy that tells the story
- 19. Eliminating unwanted elements in a photo, either using the camera’s viewfinder before the image is shot or using photography software afterward
- 21. A basic unit of digital imaging; individual dots (pixels) make up the image on the screen
- 26. A yearbook blueprint that helps you plan your book by listing the contents of each page
- 28. The white space around the spread; copy and photos must stop at the edge of the margins unless photos bleed off the page
- 29. Exactly what the person said; appears inside quotation marks (2 words)
- 31. Type set in larger point size, usually 14 points or higher, and placed above the story to attract the reader’s attention and provide information about a story’s or a spread’s content
- 32. Two facing pages designed as one unit
- 35. The amount of horizontal space between two characters
- 36. Pages in the yearbook that verbally explain the theme and the theme graphics continue
- 38. Horizontal line, actual or implied, running across a spread above or below the exact center to create unity
- 39. About three to four sentences that describe a photo; also called a cutline
- 40. _______ white space An area of white space that appears between elements on a spread; not a desirable element of design because it can separate elements and draw attention to itself
- 45. A single sheet of paper that, when folded and trimmed, will produce 16 consecutive pages
- 46. The amount of vertical space between two lines of type
- 47. Typefaces that have small additional finishing cross strokes placed at the end of the main strokes of a letter
- 48. Backbone of a book, the narrow portion of a cover between the front and back
Down
- 1. Topics featured in the yearbook and how they are covered
- 2. Absence of elements in an area on a spread (2 words)
- 4. Page or pages at the end of the yearbook that verbally wraps up the book; contains theme elements
- 5. A self-contained package of a pre-determined size, such as a top 10 list, a quiz, a photo cluster, a quote or other stand-alone coverage
- 6. Printed letters or characters
- 7. Formal student photos with names and other identifying information under them
- 8. Page one of the yearbook, containing the title, volume number, year, school name, mailing address, telephone number and school enrollment, or other significant information (2 words)
- 11. Two facing pages designed as one unit; also called double page spread or DPS
- 13. The vertical space between the inside margins of facing pages
- 14. The words that appear in a book, a newspaper, a website or a printed page
- 16. A line giving credit to the writer, photographer or designer for their story, photo or layout
- 17. Information placed at the back of the book containing facts about the production of the book such as printer, copies ordered, type and paper specifications and general acknowledgements
- 20. usually blue, found at the edges of the templates to help you determine how far to extend a bleeding element off the page
- 22. A set of letters, numbers, punctuation marks and symbols that share a unified design called a typeface; a group of related typefaces is called a type family
- 23. Extension of images, graphics or backgrounds beyond the trim marks on the edges of a page, leaving no white margin
- 24. Type without finishing strokes or “feet” (2 words)
- 25. A hard-copy printout or electronic version of a file used to check what will be printed in your book.
- 27. Idea or concept threaded throughout a yearbook, unifying its parts
- 29. A photo or an element that commands the reader’s attention on a spread by size or importance
- 30. Cut-out background, a term for when the background is deleted from the main subject of the photo
- 33. The outside of the yearbook
- 34. An alphabetized list of names and contents that indicates the pages on which each person or item is referenced, usually located in the back of the yearbook
- 37. A printer’s unit of measurement used primarily in typesetting; one pica equals 1/6 of an inch, or 12 points
- 41. Formal student photos with names and other identifying information listed to the side of the row of photos
- 42. Pages in a yearbook that separate one section from another and provide information about the section’s content; also known as division pages or section divider pages
- 43. A set of established rules governing the production of the book so that design, fonts, colors, copy, theme, etc., will be consistent throughout the book (2 words)
- 44. An unposed photo showing action
