Magazine Cover II
Early Magazine
Cover- The earliest magazine did not have what we think as covers.
Most of them dedicated the opening page to the title and table of
contents. When early magazines used cover they tended to model them
after the covers of books providing only titles and publication data.
their we're no descriptive words indicating what would be found inside
the magazine. in 1838 cover lines began to appear within such generic
covers in the later 1800s. 1872 uses a completely generic cover richly
decorated with leafy symmetry of Victorian embellishments.
The
Poster Cover- Since the 1890's to the 1960s one type of cover could be
said to dominate the magazine field. It was not only kind of cover to be
found but the poster cover produced so many memorable covers on so many
issues of so many magazines. by the early 1900s, several illustrators
including Charles Dana Gibson and also Maxfield Parrish had become
nationally famous. the covers of many of those oversized magazines
looked as i they were printed to be framed and hung on the walls. August
1898 seems typical, it presents a painting of troops on hourseback
riding to battle in cuba, in fine romantic realism. from the 1920s till
the 1960s poster covers appeared prominently on many prominent
magazines.
Pictures
Married to Type- The poster covers in the 20th century-- magazines
whose stunning cover left the aesthetic sensibilities of an era. by this
1916 cover the designer has utilized many of the methods that would be
re-invented throughtout the 20th century for integrating cover lines
with cover art. july 1932 illustrates the high degree of technical skill
illustrators could bring to bear in integrated covers. in the 1940s and
1950s leading national magazines were daring in many ways but rarely
daring in the use of cover lines.
In
the Forest of Words- Magazines at the turn of the 21 st century cover
lines were as important as cover art in some cases cover lines and cover
art improvised a new, vigorous, almost shocking dance with one other.
august 1992 cover lines attain a prominence that competes with the
nameplace of the magazine itself. though poster cover and with no cover
lines or just a few quiet ones can still be found. they have become rare
on newsstands. december 2001, the author surveyed the magazines in
large borders bookstore. the early 2000s are so immersed in commercial
typography. channel-hopping and web surfing. consumer culture competing
values and objects clamoring for attention that the picture of a cover
model cheerfully or seductively immersed in a forest of words may seem
to us a mere depiction of daily normality.
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