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