Author Archive for Charles Apple

Even more Batman feature pages

A SAMPLING OF A1 BATMAN PROMOS

After careful combing through the pages posted at the Newseum, here are my top-10 favorite across-the-top-of-A1 promo treatments. They’re rated primarily on how unpredictable and inventive they struck me.

10. BANGOR DAILY NEWS
Bangor, Maine

Bangor Batman A1
We’ve all seen this studio art by now. But the reverse nameplate really pops and the typography is very nice.

Does the fisherman look like he’s about to smack Heath upside the head?

9. THE TIMES
Munster, Ind.

Munster Batman A1
Another use of the handout art, but the reverse treatment incorporating the nameplate works for me. We should mess with nameplates more often.

8. LEXINGTON HERALD-LEADER
Lexington, Ky.

Lexington Batman A1
Still, that same art and still, that same treatment as in the previous two. But nicely done.

7. CENTRE DAILY TIMES
State College, Pa.

Centre Daily Times Batman A1
As nice as I found those black reverse promos, this much lighter, whiter one works very well for the Times. That’s the best crop I’ve seen yet for that particular handout photo.

6. SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Fort Lauderdale Batman A1
A handout photo, perhaps, but one we’ve not seen umpteen million times. Very sophisticated treatment, with the translucent strip. The clever pun head — and not one everyone else was using — helps a lot.

5. PENSACOLA NEWS-JOURNAL
Pensacola, Fla.

Pensacola Batman A1
Pensacola zigs while everyone else is zagging by ignoring the studio art and going with something straight out of the comics. The interplay with the nameplate is particularly sweet.

4. THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT
Norfolk, Va.

Virginian-Pilot Batman A1
Handout art, but cropped and used in a way that no one else could get away with. This is why they’re the Pilot and the rest of us are not.

3. THE POST-STANDARD
Syracuse, N.Y.

Syracuse Batman A1
Was that a handout photo? If so, I can’t believe more folks didn’t use it. The reverse around the nameplate is dramatic; the typography is immaculate. And the abundance of blue above the fold makes for an attractive package.

2. THE FRESNO BEE
Fresno, Calif.

Fresno Batman A1
Here’s another photo I’ve only seen in one or two places. A fabulous use of a dramatic shot. Loses points because of the blue box in the upper left and the “7″ in the upper right. Is that a page number? It’s unclear.

And my favorite A1 Batman treatment…

1. THE HERALD
Rock Hill, S.C.

I have to admit, I cheated on this one. For some reason, The Herald’s Friday front wasn’t posted at the Newseum today.

But Friday morning — only my fifth day back in town — I stopped at McDonald’s for breakfast, spotted this in the rack and couldn’t pay my 35 cents fast enough.

Rock Hill front page

Not quite sure who was the designer, but my hat’s off to presentation editor Virginia Wilcox. She and her folks are kicking major ass. The paper — at which I worked from 1988 to 1993; I even redesigned it in 1990, but that was a couple of redesigns ago — has looked great all week.

This one goes into my slide show as another fabulous small-paper example. I recently added their July 4th page, too. Average daily circulation for The Herald: 31,600.

A SAMPLING OF A1 STORY PLAY

A handful of papers found a way to avoid having to promo Batman on A1. They ran a story about Batman on A1. Some, as a lede story.

I’m not sure how I feel about this. On one hand: Dude, it’s only a movie. On the other hand: Hey, if it sells papers…

Papers running Batman on A1 included…

THE OREGONIAN
Portland, Ore.

Portland Batman

ALBUQUERQUE JOURNAL
Albuquerque, N.M.

Albuquerque Batman

METRO
New York and Philadelphia

Metro Batman

USA Today
Tyson’s Corner, Va.

USA Today batman

The Vindicator
Youngstown, Ohio

These guys did a story on a local guy who worked on Batman comic books. Pretty good, except true batfans really, really hate that ‘Holy this’ and ‘Holy that’ stuff.

Youngstown Batman

A few papers worked up A1 stories on local Batman fans.

Kalamazoo Gazette
Kalamazoo, Mich.

Oh, this guy looks very, very creepy…

Kalamazoo Batman

TribP.M.
Pittsburgh, Pa.

This guy looks less than intimidating…

Tribune PM Batman

The Oklahoman
Oklahoma City, Okla.

And OKC split the difference, leading A1 with Heath Ledger and, as secondary art, going with local women dressed up as bat-characters.

Oklahoma City Batman

MORE FEATURE TREATMENTS

On with our show…

THE VIRGINIAN-PILOT and LINK
Norfolk, Va.

I don’t think I’ve ever heard of this paper. But I thought I’d include them anyway…

The Pilot’s Bob Voros writes:

The Daily Break and Link Batman pages came out today; they look really good. Nick Mrozowski did a great job on the photo-illo and the inside page of Link was very sweet!

Here’s Nick’s illustration in the Friday Pilot:

Pilot Batman page

On the left is what Nick’s illo looked like in Link. On the right is the Joker bio that Bob wrote:

Link Batman illo Pilot joker history page

As you can see, poor Bob got a dogleg in the Pilot. His piece got a much better ride in Link:

Link Joker history

And here is the Link front page for Friday:

Link Batman front

Find more of Nick’s stuff and Bob’s stuff in their respective NewsPageDesigner galleries.

SANTA CRUZ SENTINEL
Santa Cruz, Calif.

Anthony Solis posted this one:

Santa Cruz Batman

See more of Anthony’s stuff in his NewsPageDesigner gallery.

BALL STATE DAILY NEWS
Muncie, Indiana

Shelby Murphy posted this tab cover design:

Ball State Batman page

See more of Shelby’s stuff in her NewsPageDesigner gallery.

KITSAP SUN
Bremerton, Wash.

Jon Williams calls this one a:

Pretty risky page.

Kitsap Batman inside page

See more of Jon’s stuff in his NewsPageDesigner gallery.

GWINNETT DAILY POST
Lawrenceville, Ga.

Nicole Puckett posted this tab cover…

Gwinnett Batman front

…and Tori Boone designed this inside tab spread:

Gwinnett Batman inside page

Find Nicole’s stuff and Tori’s stuff in their respective NewsPageDesigner galleries.

EXPRESO
Matamoros, Mexico

Juan Jose Palma posted this pair of pages:

Expresso cover

Expresso batman spread

See more of Juan Jose’s stuff in his NewsPageDesigner gallery.

VALEPARAIBANO
São José dos Campos, Brazil

Flavio Forner posted this Friday:

Valeparaibano Batman page

See more of Flavio’s stuff in his NewsPageDesigner gallery.

ST. PETERSBURG TIMES
St. Petersburg, Fla.

St. Pete produced a four-page Batman section in its weekly entertainment tab. Jennifer DeCamp writes:

I wanted to allude to both characters in the movie without having to show each. Fabulous illustration by John Corbitt.

St. Pete Batman cover

Pages 2&3 of our Batman coverage. John created two more images in the same style as the front, so we wouldn’t have to use traditional movie art.

St. Pete Batman inside spread

Page 4 of our Batman coverage. A brief history of the suit.

St. Pete Batman history of the suit

See more of Jennifer’s stuff in her NewsPageDesigner gallery.


FLORIDA TIMES-UNION
Jacksonville, Fla.

Patrick Garvin writes:

Here’s the cover of our Weekend section today. Kyzandrha Z. Pratt orchestrated this cover, and Jason Pratt shot and produced a “behind the scenes” video of the process of how this Dark Knight cover came to be.

Jacksonville Batman front

It’s a fun cover and the video of how they pulled it off was really
interesting.

Click here for the high-definition version or here for the standard version.

You may recall that Jacksonville built one of the more inventive Indiana Jones pages, too. Interesting their solution to The Dark Knight is so damn good as well.

Find more of Kyzandrha’s stuff in her NewsPageDesigner gallery.

See more Dark Knight pages here and here.

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Star Trek geek alert

The latest issue of Entertainment Weekly reveals the first-ever released cast photos of next summer’s new Star Trek movie, in the form of a series of collectible movie posters being distributed at next week’s massive San Diego Comics Convention.

Below: Chris Pine as Capt. James T. Kirk. And, beneath him is a stunning Zachary Quinto as Mr. Spock.

Kirk

Spock

While you’re poking around Entertainment Weekly, you might also take a look at the “exclusive first look”at the Watchmen movie. It’s on the cover this week.

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Laid-off LAT designer helping other laid-off employees find jobs

Erica Smithwho’s covered the disintegration of the newspapers like no other — posted a fabulous Q&A yesterday with Amy Martin, recently laid off from the Los Angeles Times.

Amy is offering to redesign resumés for other laid-off journalists, hold classes for out-of-work designers and to put them in touch with a financial planner who works for free.

Don’t miss this article, folks. Find it on Erica’s Graphic Designr blog.

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More fabulous Batman feature treatments

More Batman pages for your enjoyment…

VICTORIA ADVOCATE
Victoria, Texas

Yesterday, Ryan Huddle sent us the art for the wraparound cover of his entertainment tab, but today, he shows us some inside pages. The Advocate took a fake newspaper approach.

Click the thumbnails for a closer peek:

Victoria inside a Victoria inside b Victoria inside c Victoria inside d

Ryan writes:

I wanted to try something different and turn our Paper into the Gotham Advocate. Once you take off the heavy card stock cover we did you will have what looks like a newspaper from Gotham City filled with information on the movie, a review, an editorial piece on graffiti and some comics that you might find in a paper from Gotham. We even have some political ads in the tab for our favorite candidate Harvey Dent.

Again, We profiled the Advocate’s movie project last month.

THE NEWS & RECORD
Greensboro, N.C.

Greensboro Batman page

Greensboro’s Tim Rickard writes:

This was a first for our paper. Alternative Life fronts, with Batman and Joker switching places. Equal numbers were printed.

Find more of Tim’s stuff in his NewsPageDesigner gallery.

SOUTH FLORIDA SUN-SENTINEL
Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

Features Design Director Nuri Ducassi built this tab cover:

Nuri Ducassi Batman page

THE BUFFALO NEWS
Buffalo, N.Y.

Here’s one from a guy who’s a bit of a superhero himself: Vince Chiaramonte.

Vince Chiaramonte Batman page

Find more of Vince’s stuff in his NewsPageDesigner gallery.

See an assortment of pages we posted Thursday here.

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Happy birthday, Andrew Braford

Here’s wishing a happy VizEds birthday to Andrew Braford, deputy design director of the St. Petersburg Times. Andrew turns the big four-oh today.Andrew Braford
Andrew, from his Facebook profile.

Andrew is a 1991 graduate of the University of North Dakota. He spent a year as a designer for the Gary Post-Tribune in Indiana before moving to the Grand Forks Herald in North Dakota in 1989 as a designer and copy editor. He spent more than eight years in Nebraska.

In 1997, Andrew moved to the Wichita Eagle, where he spent nearly three years as a designer. He then moved to the St. Paul Pioneer Press for a year and the Columbus Dispatch for nearly two years before joining the St. Pete Times in 2005.

A few samples of Andrew’s work:
Braford sample 1 Braford sample 5
Braford sample 2 Braford sample 3 Braford sample 4

Find more in his NewsPageDesigner gallery.

Andrew shares a birthday with actor Vin Diesel, singer Martha Reeves, baseball manager Joe Torre, Virgin Records and Virgin Airlines founder Richard Branson, astronaut John Glenn, South African politican Nelson Mandela and the late, great Hunter S. Thompson.

Plus, today is National Ice Cream Day and National Caviar Day. So treat yourself to a big ol’ mess of caviar-flavored ice cream, Andrew!

And best wishes for a very happy 40th birthday!

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Gonna buy five copies for my mama

John Koblin of The New York Observer received a prototype of a proposed new-and-improved Rolling Stone.

The current issue

His take:

The test issue is the same size as your Vanity Fair, your Gourmet, your Lucky. It’s glossy and perfect-bound (goodbye, staples!), and the spine has all sorts of type on it making it perfect for your bookshelf: the dates, the issue number (RS 1056/1057), and a peek of what’s inside: BARACK OBAMA/BONNAROO/ AMY WINEHOUSE / RUSH / GREENLAND. The logo-type in the test issue is a brighter shade of red and smaller.

Inside the magazine, it appears the content is all there, just jammed into tighter spaces with sleeker-looking photos. The paper seems a bit glossier. The binding makes the magazine feel more substantial; a heavier object at 146 pages rather than the broader 120-page classic look. That’s one of the few positive things we can say about it. Otherwise, it just feels so … generic. It doesn’t retain any of the flavor of the old Rolling Stone, and the way that a magazine feels in your hands is half its game. Also, the scented ads for Diesel and Armani Acqua di Gio kinda smell more and an eight-page, heavy-stock ad for Chevy feels enormous in the new binding.

Read it in the Observer.

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