Planning New Ed
Planning New Ed
Planning New Ed
MAGAZINE
RESEARCH
2014/2015
Angel Dewing-Hall
UK tribes
Like the 60s Mods and Rockers and the 70s Punks,
Hipsters are as ubiquitous as Chavs in their role
defining UK youth culture in the 2000s...
Epitomised by Vice magazine, rampant trend-chasing and getting absolutely
wasted, Hipsters are increasingly the most detested Tribe in the UK. Most likely
to be used as a term of derision, Hipster is associated with lacking substance,
arrogance, being unoriginal and more often than not, with being a white
middle-class uni student. Calling someone a Hipster may now be a mockery, but
whichever way you cut it, the Hipster look has definitely come to dominate the
high street.
The Hipster look draws from punk rock and the 90s with a splatting of bygone
subcultures for inspiration. From Soviet prison culture to Grunge, the Beatniks or
white trash chic these disparate influences mean the Hipsters have driven
millennial youth fashion trends more than any other Tribe. From skinny jeans to
the vintage/retro revolution, acid bright colours to animal prints, Aztec print and
dip-dye hair Urban Outfitters brings off-the-shelf Hipster living to the Trendies.
Hipsters popularised fixie bikes, grandma specs, made Lomography and Holga
cameras a regular on teen Christmas lists Red Stripe became the summer drink
of choice, Ketamine the drug, and minimal tech the sound.
With so much influence, whats our problem with these kids? Christian Lorentzen
writes that Hipsters fetishize the authentic and regurgitate it with a winking
inauthenticity and this arrogance and try-hard nature really gets up the back of
a generation proud of keeping it real. Hipsters break-neck turnover through
fads (and huge spending power to support it) mean they are seen as lacking
substance in real meaning by older Tribes, while younger teens recreate their
super cool look and lifestyle in Claires Accessories. Is it fair for Hipsters to get
such a bashing, while the close-by
This is the group of people I would aim my magazine at, with the retro revolution
theme. I feel that the stereotype of people related to hipsters isnt what the
readers of my magazine would be like, they would be quirky and have an edgy
vibe.
MY COLOUR
ANALYSIS
I am going to use a sepia/ black and
white toned colour palette. This is
because it will fit in my vintage/ retro
theme so it adds to the overall image. I
also would like to include some earthy
tones to bring out a rustic theme.
My contribution to my magazine
My contribution to my magazines was the whole product. I took all
of the photographs, sorted out the hair, make-up and clothing of
my models, sorted out the set, wrote my own articles, thought of
my own title and article names. I designed and edited it all myself
also, this being the effects on the photos, the style and format of
my whole magazine. For my audience research I had the help of
my sister in-law Amber, this is because she styles herself on the
type of fashion that my magazine would hold, therefore was the
perfect person to use as my stereotypical target audience.
FRONT COVER
AGE?-
The target age would most likely be older people, yet younger people
who are more mature and dress in a vintage way would also be attracted to this
type of magazine.
INTRESTS?-
DRESS SENSE? -
Possibly elder
singers, from bands they listen too- iconic people doing little interviews or
modelling. They would also want a lot of modelling shoots, from cute settings
that would also tie in with the vintage theme.
NameAge-
Amber
22
Ethnicity-
White British
Dress Sense-
Favourite Band?
The Stypes
The structural layout of this magazine works well. The key points of
this front cover hit the target areas, with the mast head, the
striking eyes, the lip line and bow tie e.t.c
The structural layout of this magazine works well. The lines match up
with key aspects of the cover, the mast head, the picture, the eyes, lips,
jaw line e.t.c.
The structural layout of this magazine doesnt work very well. Some
points hit well but others miss the layout completely. For example it
hits the corner of his eye perfectly, yet if he was moved across
slightly, then the right hand side right angle would hit his jaw line
too, making the structure of the poster work better.
M.A.V.E.
Vintage
M.A.V.E.
Vintage
M.A.V.E
M.A.V.E Vintage
M.A.V.E Vintage
M.A.V.E Vintage
The style of font I liked the most was the 6 th option. I liked the contrast of
the bold font with the gentle vintage font. I think they complement each
other well because of the strength of the contrast.
MY VINTAGE COLLAGE