In one line: How a text is laid out, what its fonts say, and what your eye sees first all guide you through an image on purpose.
You take this in without thinking.
🖼️ Picture a gig poster: a huge band name in jagged black letters fills the top, the date sits small at the bottom, and your eye jumps to the name first, the date second. The layout and fonts decided that for you.
Here's what to look for:
One clear example of each
Layout
How the space is organised — what goes where. A common shape is a big image up top with the words underneath, so you feel the picture first, then read the message that explains it.
Typography
What the font style and size say. A wobbly, hand-drawn font feels warm and human, like a note from a friend; bold block CAPITALS feel like shouting or a serious warning.
Visual hierarchy
What your eye sees first, second, third. Size and contrast decide the order: the biggest, boldest thing is read first, and smaller print is read last — that ranking is a deliberate choice.
The key move: Name the layout, the font style or what your eye lands on first, then say what it does — what it makes you feel or read first, and why the maker wanted that.
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Why it matters in the exam: In Paper 1 image-led texts, layout and fonts earn quick marks: say what your eye is pulled to first and why, or what a font style makes the text feel like. Always link the design choice to the effect on the reader.
Analyse the layout, typography and hierarchy: a charity poster has one huge word — ‘HUNGRY’ — in bold black capitals across the top half, a small photo of an empty plate in the middle, and a thin line of grey text at the very bottom: ‘1 in 5 children in this city will go to bed like this tonight.’
Model answer plan
See the mark-by-mark plan — for / against / judgement, with marking guidance — in study mode.
Watch out: Don't just say ‘big font’ or ‘it's at the top’. Every point needs the effect — what the layout or font makes you feel or read first.