Magazines // Pt 2
Many early magazine covers would make the front page a title and a table of contents. Typicially, they would model them like books. There was no descriptive words or images that would show what the magazine was about. From the 1890s to the 1960s, posters typically had barely any cover lines and looked like they could be a poster. Later on, pictures married to type. There was usually a big title with a model overlapping it. Lastly, cover lines began to be as important as the art. Some cover lines are even bigger than the actual title.
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