The Communicator

As editor-in-chief of Ann Arbor's nationally awarded scholastic magazine, I led a redesign of the publication. This involved leading a staff of over 60, creating templates which were easily understandable, and assisting those with less design skill to contribute to a cohesive brand and consistent reader experience. Additionally, I helped lead a move towards theme-based editions, each of which had its own aesthetic language and addressed specific topics. Under my leadership as design editor and editor-in chief, we were awarded 1st and 2nd place in consecutive years by the National Scholastic Press Association, as well as receiving their prestigious Pacemaker Award.

Typography

For the redesign of the magazine, my main goal was to ensure consistency across each page of each issue. With different designers for each article, this meant strict typography guidelines, which would make it easier to train staff and compile the magazine. Aktiv Grotesk, with its breadth of families, was a sans-serif multitool with a blocky, modern feel. Georgia, with its consistent weighting, adherance to readability, and beautiful italics, was an excellent complement to the brutalism of Aktiv.

Themes

For a magazine, I think that cover design is both a chance to display artwork, as well as a way to turn a first impression into curiousity. For each themed issue, I was responsible for curating graphic and artistic styles, and creating a cover which was tied to the themed section.

For the tech edition, I settled on lines of binary code as a graphic motif. I used a 3D render of this code wrapping around a smartphone for a dramatic, eye-catching cover.

For our identity edition, I focused on studio portraits of the subjects as the main visuals. Through this, I felt that we could be more true to the people featured, without abstracting their stories. The cover and title page show the multilayered, intersecting nature of identity through the use of collage.

We dedicated an issue to violence during ongoing concerns about gun legislation, local sexual assault policy, and police brutality. One of the pieces featured a teacher who hunts in his free time, and who advocates for responsible gun ownership. I created a digital silhouette of his gun, a Winchester Model 94, which appeared on the cover with a white padlock, symbolizing the push and pull between safety and freedoms. Additionally, I laid out the article with an illustration of a bullet flying from the muzzle of the rifle and piercing through the text.

For our final issue, we focus on the stories of graduating seniors. However, for the class of 2020, graduation was marred by COVID-19, without the opportunity to celebrate in person. Although the issue remained celebratory, I wanted to acknowledge the virtual nature of our lives, not pretend it hadn't happened. I recreated computer windows to hold the portraits of each senior, and added mouse pointers floating around the pages.

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The Communicator publishes online at chscommunicator.com. To view print issues, including volume 46, click here.