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On the inside of the back cover page, extending from the facing page before it, is the endpaper. Its design matches the front endpaper and, in accordance with it, contains either plain paper or pattern, image etc. The back cover often contains biographical matter about the author or editor, and quotes from other sources praising the book.
File:Metro Report International magazine front cover March 2014.jpg File:Metropolis (architecture magazine) December 2011 cover.jpg File:Miasto Kobiet magazine cover - nr. 6 2011.jpg
The magazine was delighted to publish a photo of Dan Quayle unwittingly holding the "PROOFREADER WANTED" cover of Mad #355, on which the magazine's logo appeared as MAAD. During a photo op in 1992, the then-Vice President had incorrectly "corrected" an elementary school student on the way Quayle thought the word "potato" should be spelled.
Harper's Magazine, June 1896, by Edward Penfield. Cover art is a type of artwork presented as an illustration or photograph on the outside of a published product, such as a book (often on a dust jacket), magazine, newspaper (), comic book, video game (), music album (), CD, videotape, DVD, or podcast.
The New Yorker shared its Nov. 18 cover on social media, showcasing a silhouette of Trump. Titled "Back with a Vengeance," the magazine said that the image, by the artist Barry Blitt, is "a ...
Issue #320 (July 1993) featured a Fold-in as the front cover. [13] And in the annual "20 Worst of the Year" issue, the Fold-In is used as one of the 20 items, thus appearing as an internal page of the magazine. Only two Mad 20 issues, #389 and #11, have had a Fold-In as part of the Mad 20 and a second one as the inside back cover.
File:Cover of L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E magazine (February 1978).png File:Cover of the founding issue of Narrative Magazine, Fall 2003.png File:Cover of the WLT March 2013 issue.jpg
Flannel panel is a humorous term for a magazine masthead panel. In the UK and many other Commonwealth nations, "the masthead" is a publication's designed title as it appears on the front page: [3] what, in American English, is known as the nameplate or "flag".