
Above is an image of a broadsheet newspaper, this newspaper is, The Guardian. The Guardian was founded in 1821. It currently is politically a liberal newspaper and in the recent general election it supported the Liberal Democrats. The Guardian, is a worldwide newspaper and has a sister sunday newspaper named The Observer.
Broadsheets are the largest type of newspaper, they tend to be much larger in terms of length. The way the report news is also different to typical tabloid newspapers, articles in broadsheets are often much more serious and factual and they focus mainly on political subjects. The typography is also different as broadsheet us a Times style font whereas tabloids use a Sans font.
Typography-
Newspapers generally use two different types of typography, Times and Sans, broadsheets mainly use Times style fonts and tabloids use Sans. The popular font Times New Roman actually came from the newspaper The Times.
For example...
Times style font.
Sans style font.




Use of colour -
Although many of the above newspaper logos are from national newspapers, local newspapers seem to follow the same conventions. Newspaper logos seem to follow two main styles - one being neutral black text on a blank background and the other being light (usually white) text on a red background. The Echo has several different newspapers around the UK and their logo consists of bold red text as shown above. So, newspapers main conventions normally consist of red of or black text for the masthead or white text on a red background (usually for red top national newspapers such as The Sun). As my newspaper will specialise in sport I have decided to break the conventions of standard newspapers so that consumers know that it is different and recognise it's unique masthead. My newspaper's masthead consists of white text on a dark blue background which matches the colour of Southend's main sports business, Southend United.
Technical Terms for Parts of a Newspaper
Menu - Contents, usually found on the second page of the newspaper.
Pugs - These are found at the top corners of the newspaper, they a cleverly positioned to draw attention to them.
Lure - A piece of text that refers to something inside the newspaper to make the reader want to turn to the story.