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  2. Glossary of comics terminology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_comics_terminology

    A spread is an image that spans more than one page. The two-page spread or double-page spread [17] is the most common, but there are spreads that span more pages, often by making use of a foldout (or gatefold). [18]

  3. Double truck - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Double_truck

    In a double truck, the text and images on the pages crosses over the fold. This can create some eye-catching visual effects. For example, newspaper often use a double truck to display large illustrations, graphics, maps or photo collages, often in full color. Often double trucks are saved for special reports or in-depth graphical elements.

  4. Flight 714 to Sydney - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_714_to_Sydney

    3 Critical analysis. 4 Adaptations. 5 ... design of the Carreidas 160 and its technical specifications were published in a double-page spread for Tintin magazine in 1966.

  5. Mehemed Fehmy Agha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mehemed_Fehmy_Agha

    Raoul Duffy cover for Vanity Fair Agha introduced the double page spread and bleed photos by 1930. Through his work at both the Paris and Berlin editions of Vogue, Agha became known to Condé Nast who liked Agha's "sense of order, taste and invention," [4] When Agha arrived at Vogue ' s New York City offices in 1929, he ignited a design revolution when he revamped the magazine—as well as its ...

  6. Frank Bellamy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Bellamy

    Drawn as a two-page spread and usually organized around a complicated splash in the centre of the two pages, Heros was a bravura display of skill. The battle scenes displayed a vividness and complex layout rarely seen in comics and it won Bellamy an award (for 'Best Foreign Artist') from the American Academy of Comic Book Arts in 1972.

  7. Science Fiction Monthly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Science_Fiction_Monthly

    The magazine was published in tabloid format (40 by 28 centimetres (16 by 11 in)), with high-quality colour reproduction; it was not stapled, so that it could be disassembled and the artwork used as posters. [3] The first issue included four full-page reproductions, and another five double-page spreads, at 40 by 56 centimetres (16 by 22 in).

  8. Zapf Dingbats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zapf_Dingbats

    David Carson, radical editor of experimental music magazine Ray Gun, lent the font a degree of notoriety in 1994 when he printed an interview with Bryan Ferry in the magazine entirely in the symbols-only font – the double-page spread was therefore incomprehensible and would have to be interpreted like a cryptogram for those unfamiliar with ...

  9. 360 (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/360_(magazine)

    The double page spread on pages eight and nine, called Thread, was composed of emails, letters and posts or sections of posts from the 360 magazine forum. On page nine, there was a pie chart showing votes cast on the 360 magazine forum on a different subject every week, which was chosen by the magazine staff. There were also two features ...