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ELLEN LUPTON
Lag entering
yaa
A CRITICAL GUIDE
FOR DESIGNERS,
WRITERS, EDITORS,
& STUDENTS
r Wann, SUITH DRAWING - ROOM
PATS MIAMI Gam ts sate errs oes<< UU
BASKERVILLE
Designed by John Baskerkuile, 1757
BODONI
{| Designed hy Giambattita Bodoni, 1790s
svn CASLON
Designed by Caro! Twombly, 1990, based on pages
printed by Wilfiam-Caslon, 1734-70
CENTAUR
Designed by Brice Reyes, eot2—14
Theil by Fei Wark is based on the fiftcenth-century
Ihandl of Endo deh reg.
CENTURY EXPANDED
Designed by Morris Fuller Benton, 1900
CLARENDON
Named for the Clarendon Press, Oxford,
who cornmissioned it in 1845
mn DIDOT
Designed by Jonathan Hogfler, 1992
the types of Francois Ambros
| FEDRA SANS
Designed by Pater Blak, 2001, who was asked
{a create ade Prostestantized Univers
FILOSOFIA
Designed by Zuzana Licko, 1996,
a revival ofthe types of Bodoni
FRUTIGER
Designed by Adrian Frutiger, 1976
FRANKLIN GOTHIC
Designed by Mons Fuller Benton, 1904
FUTURA
Designed by Paul Renner, 1927, who sought on
“honest expression of technical processes.” ”
GEORGIA
Designed by Matthew Carter, 196,
for spay onseren
GILL SANS
Designed by Eric Gill, 1928.
Ithas been described as Bricain's Helvetica,
won GARAMOND
Designed by Robert Slimbach, 1989,
based on pages printed by Clande Gannand
in the sixicenth cencury
GOTHAM
Designed by Tobias Frere-Jones, 2000,
inspired by lettering found at
Port Authority Bus Terminal, Nevi York Citya a
HELVETICA NEWS GOTHIC
Designed by Max Miedinger, 1957 Designed by Morris Fuller Benton, 1908, |
HOEFLER TEXT QUADRAAT
Designed by Jonathan Hoefler . 1995 Designed by Fred Smeijers, 1992
INTERSTATE SABON
Designed by Tobias Frere-Jones, 1993, | Designed by Jan Tschichold, 1966,
inspired by U.S. highway signs inspired by the sixteenth-century types of
| Claude Garamond
a a.
Designed by Martin Major, 1991
| META ies
Designed by Erik Spiekermann, 1991 | THESIS SERIF
se Designed by Lucas de Groot, 1994
MRS EAVES
Design Zee 198, TRADE GOTHIC
inspived by pages printed by John Basteraile Designed by Jackson Burke, 1948-60,
inspired by nineteenth-century gratesques
NEUTRAFACE UNIVERS
| Designed by Christian Schwarts, House [Link]
2002, bated on lettering created byl
Richard Neutra in the 1940s and)
L Designed by Adrian Frutiger, 1957
iat VERDANA
| NOBEL SaGAIARRTE cea as
for display on screen
Designed by Tobias Frere-Jones,1993,
seed 929 ypsby he Dutch ypograrer ws
fanaa eee NH WALBAUM
“Futuracockedina dirty pan” Designed by Justus Erick Walbaum, 1800aay BUFO
_thinking
with
A CRITICAL GUIDE
FOR'DESIGNERS,
WRITERS, EDITORS,
& STUDENTS
GAP PRENcerow [Link]. ew yorkPublished by
Princeton Architectural Press
57 East Seventh Street
New York, New York 10003,
Fora five catalog of books, call1.800.7
Visit our web site at [Link]
©2004 Princeton Architectural Press
All ights reserved
Printed in China
7.06.05 5432. Firstadition
No partof this book may be used or reproduced in
any manner without witten peemission from the
publisher, except in the context of reviews
tvedy reasonable attempt has beén made to ideatify
it, Errors or omissions will be
owners of cons
corrected in subsequent editions,
Libcary of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Lupton, Ellen
“Thinking with type 2 erica guide for
designees, waiter, editors, & students
Fillen Lupton. — ste
cin, — (Design briefs)
Includes bibliographical references.
ISDN r56898-448-> (alk: paper)
1. Graphie desipn (Typography)
‘ype and type-founding
[Tile I. Series
Ellen Lapton
Mark Lamste, Princeton Architectural Press
Elizabeth Jobson
Jennifer Tobias and Ellen Lupton
Eric Karnes and Elke Gasselseder
Dan Meyers
Scala, designed by Martin Majaor
Thesis, designed by Lucas de Groot
ete Alin, Nicola Bednarek, Janet Dehning,
Megan Carey, Penny (Yuen Pik) Chu, Russel
Fecnandez, Jan Haus, Clae Jacobson, Naney Eklund
Liter, Linda Lee, Katharine Myers, Jane Sheinman,
Scott Tennent, Jennifer Thompson, Joe Weston,
and Deb Wood of Princeton Architectural Press
— kevin C, Lippert pdlser,
ae ODEMANILA JBRARIES
(686.a'—deaaCONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
LETTER
Anatomy
Size
Classification
Famities
Big Families
Designing Typefaces
Logotypes
Screen Fonts
Blemap Fonts
Letter Exercise
TEXT
Kerning,
Tracking
Line Spacing
Alignment
Vertical Alignment
Hierarchy
Web Hierarchy
Web Accessibility
Paragraph Exercise
Word Exercise
Text Exercise
GRID
Golden Section
Single-Column Grid
Multi-Columa Grid
Modular Grid
Grid Exercise
Data Tables
Data Table Exercise
APPENDIX
Dashes, Spaces,
and Punctuation
Editing
Editing Hard Copy
Easing Soft Copy
Proofreading
Free Advice
Bibliopraphey
indexEMBO RCO, 1
peice
Tis vo0 pomen wis hn HEAINES HE TE, Seren
ent eeenra go moans mie goan Ont twenty ie emNrs M88
| ER anil cite
‘A woman's healthy face buss thro sheet otext her right
Complexion prouing the preduct’s efficacy better than ary writen
claim, Both ext and image ave been dram by hand, reproduced
via color Bthography. Printed here at actual size
hoon’s saxsanantita, Advertisement Fihograph, 1885
|INTRODUCTION
THE ORGANIZATION OF LETTERS ona blanls page—or screen—is the
designer's most basic challenge. What kind of font to use? How big? How
should those letters, words, and paragraphs be aligned, spaced, ordered,
shaped, and otherwise manipulated?
‘Anyone who regularly and enthusiastically commits acts of visual
communication will find something to use and enjoy in this book, which
offers practical information within a context of design history and theory.
Sore readers will be chiefly interested in the sections that present basic
typographic principles in concise, non-dogmatic layouts. Others will spend
more time with the critical essays, which look at the cultural frameworks
of typography.
I decided to create this book because there was no adequate text to
accompany my own courses in typography, which I have been teaching at
Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore since 1997. Some books on
typography focus on the classical page; others are vast and encyclopedic,
overflowing with facts and details. Some rely too heavily on illustrations of
their authors’ own work, providing narrow views ofa diverse practice, while
others are chatty and dumbed-down, presented in a condescending tone.
1 sought a book that is serene and intelligible, a volume where
design and text gently collaborate to enbance understanding. I sought a work
that is small and compact, economieal yet well constructed—a handbook
designed for the hands. { sought a book that reflects the diversity of
typographic life, past and present, exposing my students to history, theory,
and ideas. Finally, I sought a book that would be relevant across the media
of visual communication, from the printed page to the glowing screen.
Thad no alternative but to write the book myself.
Thinking with Type is assembled in three sections: LetreR, T2xr, and GRID,
building from the basic atom of the letterform to the’ organization of words
into coherent bodies and flexible systems. Each section opens with a
narrative essay about the cultural and theoretical issues that fuel typographic
design across a range of media. The demonstration pages that follow each
essay show not just kow typography is structured, but why, asserting the
functional and cultural basis for design babits and conventions.‘The first section, zerreR, reveals how early typefaces referred to
the body, emulating the work of the hand. The abstractions of neoclassicism
bred the strange progeny of nineteenth-century commercial typography.
In the twentieth century, avant-garde artists and designers explored the
alphabet as a theoretical system, After digital font design became a cottage
industry and a mode of underground publishing in the r980s, typography
became a natrative form that revived its connections with the body.
‘The second section, TEXT, considers the massing of letter
larger bodies. Designers approach text as a continuous field whose grain
color, density, and silhouette can be endlessly adjusted. Technology has
shaped the design of typographic space, from the concrete physicality of
metal type to the flexibility—and constraints—offered by digital media,
‘Text has evolved from a closed, stable body to a fluid and open ecology.
“The third section, Gx1b, looks at spatial organization. Grids
underlie every typographic system. In the early twentieth century, Dada and
Futurist artists attacked the rectilinear constraints of metal type and exposed
the mechanical grid of letterpress. Swiss designers in the 19408 and 19508
cxcated design's first total methodology by rationalizing the grid. Their work,
which introduced programmatic thinking to a field governed by taste and
convention, remains profoundly relevant to the systematic thinking required
when designing for multimedi
Throughout the book, examples of design practice demonstrate
the elasticity of the typographié system, whose rules can all be broken
Finally, the aepen pix contains handy lists, helpful hints, dire warnings,
and resources for further study,
‘This book is about thinking with typography—in the end, the
emphasis falls on with. Typography is tool for doing things with: shaping
content, giving language a physical body, enabling the social flow of
messages. Typography is an ongoing tradition that connects you with other
designers, past and futuze. Type is with you everywhere you go—the street,
the mall, the Web, your apartment, This book aims to spesk to, and with,
all the readers and writers, designers and producers, teachers and students,
whose work engages the ordered yet unpredictable life of the visible word.
8i
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
nvxen, Lam indebted to my teachers
AS A DESIGNER, WRITER, AND VISUAL T
at the Cooper Union, where I studied art and design from 1981 to 198.
Baclc then, the design world was rather neatly divided between a Swiss
inflected modernism and an idea-based approach rooted in American
advertising and illustration. My teachers, including George Sadek, William
Bevington, and James Craig, staked out an odd place between those worlds,
allowing the modernist fascination with abstract systems to collide with
the str
nge, the poetic, and the popular
The title of this book, Thinking with Type, is an homage to James
Craig's primer Desigiting with Type, the utilitarian classic that was our text
book at Cooper: Ifthat book was a handyman’s guide to basic typography,
this one is a naturalist’s Geld guide, approaching its subject as an organic
system that is more evolutionary than mechanical. What I really learned
from my teachers was how to think with type: how to use visual and verbal
iage to develop and deliver ideas. As a student, discovering typography
lang
was finding the bridge connecting written language to visual ar.
‘To write my own book for the twenty-first century Uhave had to
educate myself all over again, In 2003 | enrolled in the Doctorate in
Communications Design program at the University of Baltimore. There |
have worked with Stuart Moulthrop and Nancy Kaplan, world-class scholars,
critics, and designers of networked media and digital interfaces. Their
nfluence is seen throughout this book.
My colleagues at Maryland Institute College of Art have built
4 distinctive design culture at the school; special thanks go to Ray Allen,
Fred Lazarus, Elizabeth Nead, Bernard Canniffe, Jennifer Cole Phillips,
Rachel Schreiber, and all my stuilents, past and future.
My editor, Mark Lamster, has kept this project alive and conscious
across its seemingly endless development. | also thank Eric Karnes and Elke
Gasselseder, Kevin Lippert at Princeton Architectural Press, Timothy Linn at
Asia Pacific Offget, William Noel at the Walters Art Museum, Paul Warwick
Thompson and Barbara Bloemink at the Cooper-Hewitt, National Design
Museum, and all the designers who shared their work with me.
learn something every day from my children, Jay and Ruby
amazing Miller farnily. My friends—
and fom my parents, my twin, and the
Jennifer Tobias, Edward Bottone, Claudia Matzko, Dar
and Joy Hayes—sustain my life. My husband, Abbott Miller, is the greatest
designer I know, and | am proud to include him in this volume.
ie Alexander,Miherer Saar
MhAger fee}
2 eet ee,
Woy Pot oN
mantis scayoon began designing thet
with this mapkin sketch made on a ra
6. The typefce was released by FontSiop
sketches and prototypesLETTER‘TYPE, SPACES, AND LEADS 3lll
1436
auucqueap
titasillisd
tantd bowti
noftos-rit
ied
intrefatifty
Seeger peut
debomoty
LETTER
THIS 1s NOT A HOOK ABOUT FONTS. [tis a book about how to use them
“Typefaces are an essential resource employed by graphic designers, just as
glass, stone, steel, and countless other materials are employed by architects.
Graphic designers sometimes create their own fonts and custom lettering,
More commonly, however, they tap the vast library of existing typefaces,
choosing and combining them in response to a particular audience or
situation. To do this with wit and wisdom requites knowledge of how—
letterforms have evolved.
Words originated as gestures of the body. The first typefaces were
and why-
directly modeled on the forms of calligraphy. Typefaces, however, are not
bodily gestures—they are manufactured images designed for infinite
repetition. ‘The history of typography reflects a continual tension between
the hand and the machine, the organic and the geometric, the human body
and the abstract system. These tensions, which marked the birth of printed
letiers over five hundred year ago, continue to energize typography today.
Movable type, invented by Johannes Gutenberg, in Germany in the
carly fifteenth century, revolutionized writing in the West. Whereas scribes
had previously manufactured boolks and documents by hand, printing with
type allowed for mass production: large quantities of letters could be cast
bled into “forms.” After the pages were proofed,
from a mold and as
corrected, and printed, the letters were put away in gridded cases for reuse.
Movable type had been eniployed earlier in China, but it had
proven less useful there. Whereas the Chinese writing system contains tens
of thousands of distinct characters, the Latin alphabet translates the sounds
of speech into a small set of maarks, making it well-suited to mechanization,
ide manuscript as its model.
Dlackletter,” he
Gutenberg’s famous Bible took the hane
Emulating the dense, dark handwriting know
reproduced its erratic texture by creating variations of each letter as well
as numerous ligatures (characters that combine two or more letters into
MMMTG AA 4 single form).
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ALMLIVXTA LXX dignissim lectus. Nun
ofc as wel as their gothic (rather than humanist origins. scat was inreduerd in 2990 by the
cd the German lets Dutch ypegrapher Martin Majoor. Although
tt lighter), and dhs this thoroughly contemporary iyseface hax
created roman type.” geome serif and rational, anos moduler
forms, i reflects the calligraphic origin of
‘ype, a sen in letersi 0.Sed ne forte tuo atrea
Hic timor eft ipfis
N on adeo leniter noft
‘vt mens oblito puln
£ llic phylacides inn
Non potuit cas inn
$ ed cxpidis filfis ati
theffitis antiquan
I llic quicquid evo fa
Trait ey fiti litto
1 lic foymofie uenian
Qtas dedit arzuni,
Quarim nulla tie fi
Gration eo tellus f
Quiannis te longe re;
Cara tamen lachry
onan te
ys dese for
Alive Moni
61500, They ave
concer as wo
separate pcs
Je9 1ANNON
Romar and alc types
“rte Imprimerie Royale,
Pai, s62,coorinated
into a arg type fry,
comme fay des-ia remarqué,"S, Augu. 106
ftin demande aux Donatiftes en yne fem- Foot, of roman type, see Gerrit
lable occurrence : Quay done ? lors gue Saya Yori
HUMANISM AND THE BODY
In fifteenth-century Italy, humanist writers and scholars rejected gothic
scripts in favor of the lettera antica, a classical mode of handwriting with
‘wider, more open forms. The preference for lettera antica was part of
the Renaissance (rebirth) of classical art and literature. Nicolas Jenson,
a Frenchman who had learned to print in Germany, established an
influential printing firm in Venice around 1469. His typefaces merged the
gothic traditions he had known in France and Germany with the Italian
taste for rounder, lighter forms. They are considered among the first—and
finest—roman typefaces.
Many fonts we use today, including Garamond, Bembo, Palatino,
and Jenson, are named for printers who worked in the fifteenth and
sixteenth centuries, These typefaces are generally known as “humanist.”
Contemporary revivals of historical fonts are designed to conform with
modern technologies and current demands for sharpness and uniformity
Each revival responds to—or reacts against—the production methods,
Drinting styles, and artistic habits of its own time. Some revivals are based
‘on metal types, punches, or drawings that still exist; most rely solely on
printed specimens.
ltalic letters, also introduced in fifteenth-centuxy Htaly (as their
ame suggests), were modeled on a more casual style of handwriting,
While the upright humanist scripts appeared in prestigious, expensively
produced books, the cursive form was used by the cheaper writing shops,
whete it could be written more rapidly than the carefully formed leitera
antica, Aldus Manutius was a Venetian printer, publisher, and scholar who
used italic typefaces in his internationally distributed series of small,
inexpensive books. The cursive form saved money because it saved space.
Aldus Manutius’s books often paired cursive letters with roman capitals;
the two styles still were considered fundamentally distinct
In the sixteenth century, printers began integrating roman and
italic forms into type families with matching weights and xcheights (the
height of the main body of the lowesface letter). Today, the italic style in
‘most fonts is not simply a slanted version of the roman; it incorporates the
curves, angles, and narrower proportions associated with cursive forms
1 the camplex origins
Ses
eter
nie
funni de parler? teferituredu grand Dien #2, 880
Beate
Marks, 2000),
if ancouver: Hartley and
tas lifras,enblions none comment none anions saps (Vnicowrer atey an
seeLoren | 16
dngued that designed meet
sere shold eens fo
reflect the ideal te printing press
uma body, Reguding te eter A, he wrote: of Louis XIV. Inst by royal commit
the eraser cowrs the man's ong of Simounrni designed his Kelson w finely meshed
generation 0 signify that Movksy and Chetty grid. & royal typeface (rain du rei uss thea
fare required, before alee, in those who seek éreate by Philippe Grandjean, based 01
acquainsance with wllhaped este.” Simonneau’s engravings
By WILLIAM CASLON, S Pp E G I \
ABC gene mw By JOHN BASKERVILLE
teach Resa pier
AB € D quemad fin, "i" Am indebted to you for two if tone
ABCDEF “#""!""" Tetters dated from Corcyra. Comin:
08 a
He aimed to spas Cas by erating
fed letters with mare void contrast,
Lapefces in eighteentiecentury
Brylane wid crisp. upright ‘between thick and thin clemers. Wires
saracters that apps, Robert Cason’ eters were widely wsed i is own tie
Sighs has writen ashere work was denounced by any ef kis
‘more modeled and tes writen ‘ontempararies as amateur and extremist
han Renata
AUSTERLITI
wsihdicaicitts A GALLIS
E MAXI
in GermanyENLIGHTENMENT AND ABSTRACTION
Aabcdef
Renaissance artists sought standards of proportion in the idealized human
body: The French designer and typographer Geofroy Tory published a series
SS RB ofiagrams in 1529 thet linked the anatomy of leters to the anatomy of
man. A new approach—distanced from the body—would unfold in the age
of scientific and philosophical Enlightenment.
‘A committee appointed by Louis XIV in France in 1693 set out
to construct roman letters against a finely meshed grid, Whereas Geofioy
Tory’s diagrams were produced as woodcuts, the gridded depictions of the
) romain du roi (king's alphabet) were engraved, made by incising a copper
ZCC, plate with a tool called a graver. The lead typefaces derived from these
=~“ Jarge-scale diagrams reflect the linear character of engraving as well as the
GG, Kenic attinde of the king’s committee
AB CF Engraved letters—whose fluid lines are unconstrained by letter-
i press's mechanical grid—offered an apt medium for formal lettering
NOP Engraved reproductions of penmanship disseminated the work of the great
cightcenth-century writing masters. Books such as George Bickham's
The Universal Penman (1743) featured roman letters—each engraved as @
cxonce Bickast, 174. unique chavacter—as well as lavishly curved seripis,
pape ares it Eighteenth-century typography was influenced by new styles of
“alow tan
handwriting and their engraved reproductions. Printers like William
Caslon in the 1720s and John Baskerville in the 17508 abandoned the rigid
nib of humanism for the flexible steel pen and the pointed quill,
jristraments that rendered a fluid, swelling path, Baskerville, himself a
master calligrapher, would have admired the thinly sculpted lines that
ig books, He created typefaces of such
appeared in the engraved writi
sharpness and contrast that contemporaries accused him of “blinding all
his admirer Benjarnin * the Readers in the Nation; for the strokes of your letters, being too thin and
Fronkln. for the fallletee see narrow, hurt the Eye." To heighten the startling precision of his pages.
i ita amaiehe Baskerville made his own inks and hot-pressed his pages after printing.
Fe (ioadohs Faden ‘The severe vocabulary of Baskerville was carried to an extreme by
Miler Lined, 1975). 68. Giambattista Bodoni in Italy and Firmin Didot in France at the turn of the
oa Roi ma ee nineteenth century. Their typefaces—which havea wholly vertical axis,
extreme contrast between thick and thin, and crisp, waferlike serifs—were
Se (Vancouver: Haley and
Marks. 1992, 1997) the gateway to a new vision of typography unhinged from calligraphy.
“This accusation was reported
to Baskerille ina letter from
The romain du roi was designed not by a typographer but by a government committee
consisting of two priests, an accountant, and an engineer. Robert Bringhurst, 1992[Link] MARONIS
BU COLILG «A
ECLOGA I. cui nomen TITYRUS.
. Meuisoeus, Tityrus.
1TvRE, tu patule recubans fub tegmine fagi
Silveftrem tenui Mufam meditaris avena:
Nos patric fines, et dulcia linquimus arva;
Nos patriam fagimus: tu, Tityre, lentus in umbra
5 Formofam refonare doces Amaryllida filvas.
T. O Meliboee, Deus nobis hc otia fecit:
Namque crit ille mihi femper Deus: illius aram
Sepe tener noftris ab ovilibus imbuet agus.
Ille meas crrare boves, ut cernis, et ipfium
10 Ludere, quee vellem, calamo permifit agrefti.
‘MM, Non equidem invideos miror magis: undique totis
‘Ufque adeo turbatur agris. en ipfe capellas
Protenus weger ago: hanc etiam vix, Tityre, duco:
Hic inter denfas corylos modo namque gemellos,
15 Spem gregis, ah! filice in nuda connixa reliquit,
Scepe malum hoc nobis, fi mens non leva faiffet,
De ceelo tadtas memini praedicere quercus:
Sape finiftra cava priedixit ab ilice comix.
Sed tamen, ifle Deus qui fit, da, Tityre, nobis.
20 T. Urbem, quam dicunt Romam, Meliboce, putavi
Stultus ego huic noftrae fimilem, quo fepe folemus
Paftores ovium teneros depellere foctus.
Sic canibus catulos fimiles, fic matribus haedos
A Noram;vyinats (L517)
Book page 1757
Printed by John Baskerville
“The mpefces we by Joh
ashen be the eighteens
century wvee rear ble—
‘ave socking in tei day for
tie sharp, upright forms and
sab canta beeen thick
tnd hin eleme's In ation
oa roman it fre, ths page
lines talc capitals lage
sale copitls (gereously
Tesespaced), sal capitals
{sled io coordinate with
Toserease text), and noting
or ldstyle numerals (designed
With axenders decentes, and
4 anal boy height io work
© itive vharaclers)
cine (rcv)
Book page, 801
Pied by Fics Dio
Tacs bye Die
fant rnc eer or
struct aid severe shan those
Ofte wi ee
Vinee lf ont tak
feta oti i
Milan pried
pipes cle ne
slings mer,”
ot pages are reproduced
fiom Wiliay Dana Orcuth,
1m Questo he Pee Beek
(aw Yer: bie, Brow and
Company, 1926); margins ae
ot acura,
LA THEBAIDE,
ou
LES FRERES ENNEMIS,
TRAGEDIE.
ACTE PREMIER.
SCENE L
JOCASTE, OLYMPE.
socasrE.
Tus sont sortis, Olympe? Ah! mortelles douleurs!
Qu’'un moment de repos me va coiter de pleurs!
Mes yeux depuis six mois étoient ouverts aux larmes,
Et le sommeil les ferme en de telles alarmes!
Puisse plutdt la mort les fermer pour jamais,
Et mempécher de voir le plus noir des forfaits!
Mais en sont-ils aux mains?At10 or mas Morning: |
k QUANTITY OF OL
Saile.“-.
ing the remi typ 39
2k of the Seb ro un re ae
ion on single page
evaggeated the polavizasion
(J. Boulb
of eters into thick a
LGYPCIAN, or slab, peices cor inet ”
refine deta toa oo bcaetg, Suc yp i |
ae = NRE |
slab serifesit its on wright fonts fier sewed bn the
sind mass, Inrodced in 866, eth center fo comvey
ths seo iy devon vainly aber
raphical de
RIE f
‘My person was hideous, my stature gigantic, What did this mean? Who was I? What was 2.
‘Accursed creator! Why did you create a monster so hideous that even you turned away from
mein disgust? Mary Shelley, Frankenstein, 1831
WLMONSTER FONTS
Although Bodoni and Didot fueled their designs with the calligraphic
practices of their time, they created forms that collided with typographic
tradition and unleashed a strange new world, where the structural attributes
of the letter—serif and stem, thick and thin strokes, vertical and horizontal
stress—would be subject to bizarre experiments. In search of a beauty both
rational and sublime, Bodoni and Didat had created a monster: an abstract
and dehumanized approach to the design of letters.
With the rise of industrialization and mass consumption in the
nineteenth century came the explosion of advertising, a new form of
communication demanding new kinds of typography. Big, bold faces were
designed by distorting the anatomical elements of classical letters, Fonts of
astonishing height, width, and depth appeared—expanded, contracted,
shadowed, inlined, fattened, faceted, and floriated. Serifs abandoned their
role as finishing details to become independent architectural structures, and
the vertical stress of traditional letters migrated in new directions.
ITT? T THUY PII Te TTTy
nag ‘Ano TATINANTIQUE TUSCAN ay
‘pe historian Red Roy Lead, the material for casting metal type, is too soft to hold its shape at large
pel erent) suulied sizes under the pressure of the printing press, In contrast, type cut from
the mechanized devs 4 could be printed at gigantic scales, The introduction of the combined
sieges tha seed to
frien gecaciler pantograph and router in 1834 revolutionized wood-type manufacture.
vanity fdiplay eves in “The pantograph is a tracing device that, when Tinked to a router for carving,
the nnetocuth entry
Thiago sows haw
the basi guar se
form—callel yan This mechanized design approach treated the alphahet as a flexible
slab was ut, pinched, system divorced from the calligraphic tradition. The search for archetypal,
ples, ond cet spe a
Kevspeiegfonanen, perfectly proportioned letterforms gave way to a view of typography as an
Seip wee ranjorned elastic system of formal Features (weight, stress, stem, crossbars, serifs,
fom caligrephic end- angles, curves, ascenders, descenders). The relationships among letters in a
stokes int indepen : :
ei Seat’ font became more important than the identity of individual characters.
oul be fee adjusted
allows a parent drawing to spawn va ith different proportions,
weights, and decorative excresences
For extensive analysis and examples of decorated types, see Rob Roy Kelly
American Wood Type: #828-1900, Notes on the Bvlution of Decora and Large Leters
[Sew York: Da Capo Press, 1969), Sce also Rusti Melean, “An Examination
of Egyptians,” Texts on Type: Critical Writings on Typggraph ed, Steven Heller and
Philip B, Meges (New York: Allworth Press, 2001), 70-76,—
. ‘
;
|
| |
|
DURYEA'S UM FORTED
. Lithographic trade card, 1878
4 nineteenth century stimulated
turban space, exe, a mia is {
. shown posting a bill in flagrant
. ee eee
| area
7"
oa
rare
at
strc
ieee
| :
aimize the sate ofthe lees
Hone. Although
the yp the
as atic and |
in she spe
cemered
aFULL MOON,
ST. MICHAEL?S ~
TEMPERANCE AND |
EXCURSION
BELLE!
To Osbrook and Watch Hill,
; oe La oa aa eeeee GOETH
STOFFREFORM AND REVOLUTION
Some designers viewed the distortion of the alphabet as gross and
immoral, tied to a destructive and inhumane industrial system. Writing in
1996, Edward Johnston revived the search for an essential, standard
alphabet and warned against the “dangers” of exaggeration, Johnston,
inspired by the nineteenth-century Aris and Crafts movement, looked back
to the Renaissance and Middle Ages for pure, uncorrupted letterforms.
Although reformers like Johnston remained romantically attached
to history, they redefined the designer as an intellectual distanced from
AD i 1 L 33 society, striving to create objects and images that would challenge and
Bite revise dominant habits and practices
13 Bae ‘The avant-garde artists of the early twentieth century rejected
Sposa Sosceadome| historical forms but adopted the model of the critical outsider, Members
of the De Stil group in the Netherlands reduced the alphabet to
Iowan jouxsrow bua! perpendicular elements. At the Bauhaus, Herbert Bayer and Josef Albers
ths 90g of esentia™
1 one cg eet consteucted alphabets from basic geometric forms—the circle, square, and
Imerpins Whe dering triangle—which they viewed as elements of a universal language of vision.
omneial splay letering, ‘Such experiments approached the alphabet as a system of abstract
eS cate relationships. Like the popular printers of the nineteenth century, avant-
Inpro garde designers abandoned the quest for an essential, perfectly shaped
alphabet, but they offered austere, theoretical alternatives in place of the
solicitous novelty of mainstream advertising,
Assembled, like machines, from modular components, these
experimental designs emulated factory production. Yet most were
On Futura seeChrisopiter produced by hand rather than as mechanical typefaces (although many
Burke, Paul Romer The si gre now available digitally). Futura, designed by Paul Renner in
einer Ne Nags, _ 1927, embodied the obsessions of the avant garde in a multipurpose,
gt) On icesperimentl cornmercially available typeface. Although Renner rejected the active
Iypeicesoftie 1920sand movement of calligraphy in favor of forms that are “calming” and abstract,
Fee en he tempered the geometry of Futura with subtle variations in stroke, curve,
and proportion. Renner designed Futura in numerous weights, viewing
on Typo (London:
Hypien Press, 003). 253-45. his font as a painterly tool for constructing a page in shades of gray.
‘The calming, abstract forms of those new typefaces that dispense with handwritten movement
offer the typographer new shapes of tonal value that are very purely attuned. These types can be
used in light, semi-bold, or in saturated black forms, Paul Renner, 1931ek: vom ee
NEU
JLphJwber
Fes
foude-2wnt exowwe presented
this canned version ofa
Garamond an contrast
ws is ou naw aihabe,
whose frms ace he pred
‘arcs othe rev
rmpana neo ceed
‘areerslution fos for
stip seers and printers in
15. Tse ons have since
Ine mera into Loigre's
estes Lo-Res fon fly,
sige fr pvt and gtd
rei
See Ruy VandetLans
and Zuzana Licho, mip:
Graphic Design int the
Dig Rents (New York
‘Yan Nostra Rein,
£993}:
‘TYPE AS PROGRAM.
Responding in 1967 to the rise of electronic communication, the Duteh
designer Wim Crouwel published designs for a “new alphabet” constructed
from straight lines. Rejecting centuries of typographic convention, he
designed his letters for optimal display on a video screen (CRT),
where curves and angles are rendered with horizontal scat lines. In a
brochure promoting his new alphabet, subtitled “An Introduction
for a Programmed Typography.” he proposed a design methodology in
which decisions are rule-based and systematic.
Jbcdegdht 4jELanopqr
Fuuurys
In the mid-r980s, personal computers and low-resolution printers put the
tools of typography in the hands of a broader public. In 1985 Zuzana Licko
‘Degan designing typefaces that exploited the rough grain of early desktop
systems. While other digital fonts imposed the coarse grid of screen displays,
and dot-matrix printers onto traditional typographic forms, Licko embraced
the language of digital equipment. She and her husband, Rudy VanderLans,
cofounders of Emigre Fonts and Emigre magazine, called thernselves the
“new primitives,” pioneers of a technological dawn,
Emigre Oakland [ell
By the early 1990s, with the introduction of high-resolution laser printers
and outline font technologies such as PostScript, type designers were less
constrained by low-resolution outputs. The rise of the Internet as well as cell
phones, hand-held video games, and PDAs, have insured the continued
relevance of pixel-based fonts as more and mote infgrmation is desi -d for
publication directly on screen.
Living with computers gives funny ideas. Wim Crouwel, 1967rerten 28
CURATOR: JOSEPH WESNEF
Linda Ferguson
Steve Handschu
JamesHay
Matthew HollandSCU! PTUR!
Gary Laatsch
=_F-Brian Liljeblad
PTURE
|
5 Dora Natella
© Matthew Schellenberg
| Cy) Richard String
S Michell Thomas
| mi
| Robert Wilhelm
| pening Recep tion: Friday June 8,[Link] pm
Cc
ae
<
ee
etroit Focys Gallery 4
as Beaubien, ThirdFloor
TROIT, MIC HIGAN 48 226
Hours:Noon to6 p nJVEDNESDAY - SATURDAYsrs | 29 :
TYPE AS NARRATIVE
In the early 19908, as digital design tools began supporting the seamless
reproduction and integration of media, many designers grew dissatisfied |
with clean, unsullied suirfaces, seeking instead to plunge the letter into the
harsh and caustic world of physical processes, Letters, which for centuzies
hhad sought perfection in ever more exact technologies, became scratched,
bent, bruised, and polluted
Template Gothic: flawed technology
Barry Deck’s typeface Template Gothic, designed in 1990, is based on letters
drawn with a plastic stencil. The typeface thus refers to a process that is at |
once mechanical and manual, Deck designed Template Gothic while he was |
a student of Ed Fella, whose experimental posters inspired a generation of
digital typographers, After Template Gothic was released commercially
by Emigre Fonts, its use spread worldwide, making it an emblem of “digital
typography” for the r9ges.
Dead History: feeding on the past
P, Scott Makela's typeface Dead History, also designed in 1990, is a pastiche
of two existing typefaces: the traditional serif font Centennial and the Pop |
classic VAG Rounded. By manipulating the vectors of readymade fonts,
Makela adopted the sampling strategy employed in contemporary art and
music. He also referred to the importance of history and precedent, which
play a role in nearly every typographic innovation.
CcNdEeFfGg HhiiJjKk |
“The Dutch typographers Erik von Blokland and Just van Rossum have
combined the roles of designer and programmer, creating typefaces that
‘embrace chance, change, and uncestainty. Their 1990 typeface Beowulf |
was the first in a series of typefaces with randomized outlines and
programmed behaviors.
‘The industrial methods of producing typography meant that all letters
had to be identical... Typography is now produced with sophisticated
equipment that doesn't impose such rules. The only limitations are in
our expectations. Exik van Blokland and Just van Rossum, 2000i
BACK TO WORK
Although the 1990s are best remembered for images of decay, typeface
designers continued to build a repertoire of general purpose fonts designed
to comfortably accommodate broad bodies of text. Rather than narrate the
story of their own birth, such workhorse fonts provide graphic designers
with flexible palettes of letterforms coordinated within larger families,
{ :
| Mrs Eaves: working woman
Zuzana Licko, fearless pioneer of the digital dawn, produced historical
revivals during the 1990s alongside her experimental display faces.
Her 1996 typeface Mrs Eaves, inspired by the eighteenth-century types
of John Baskerville (and named after his mistress and housekeeper
Sarah Eaves), became one of the most popular typefaces of its time
Quadraat: all-purpose Baroque
Designed in the Netherlands, typefaces such as Martin Majoor’s Scala
(used for the text of this book) and Fred Smeijers's Quadraat offer crisp
interpretations of typographic tradition. These typefaces look back to
sixteenth-century printing from a contemporary point of view, as seen in
1992, the Quadraat family
has expanded to include sans-serif forms in numerous weights and styles.
Gotham: blue-collar curves
In 2000 Tobias Frere-Jones introdiiced Gotham, derived from letters found
at the Port Authority Bus Terminal in New York City, Gotham expresses a
no-nonsense, utilitarian attitude that persists today alongside the aesthetics,
of grunge, neofuuturism, pop-culture parodies, and straight historical
revivals that are all part of contemporary typography.
When choosing a font, graphic designers consider the history
formal qualities.
their decisively geometric serifs. Introduces
of typefaces and their current connotations as well as th
“The goal is to find an appropriate match between a style of letters and the
specific social situation and body of content that define the project at hand.
There is no playbook that assigns a fixed meaning or function to every
typeface; each designer must confiont the library of possibilities in light of
a project’s unique circumstances.| amet
"Amhem is areliable ype family initially designed for the Nederlandse
Staatscourant, the daily newspaper ofthe Dutch state. Ithasa roman,
ftalic anel matching smal esps, lining figures, nontining figures and.
scheight lining figures in four weights. As well as thacit has two weights of
Fine titling vatiamts in roman and italie. Amber is available in TrueType
and PostScript formats, for both PC and Mae platforms. OpenType is du
in February 2004.
Website
04
nl publishers: Feed
Smmeijers and Realy
This Flashshased Web
ligt aye four allows users
to test fonts on the fy Te designers
lawcihed ser own “label” af
eating fonts uc
for Font Shop
5p Ine
played here is the typeaee2. fon hat hs projective memory tht reminds yout a
5. fon vith alee
4. font whan
afm aoe
6, font without temporal etlecton, without tino
7 an apolitical font, ont tt ei
8, font unaffected by the force of gravity an the weight! nin
130, ¢ Marshal MeLahon font that stubbornly poring ae
11 a font that takes advantage of al that pron
ete
12, font that des something other th ston eae nahin
13. font withthe copay to bse wih
14,» recombinant font — every lttorforn the unruly eld ofa paditale iit oni
35, font that sounds as oda
46, fot that wats a
U2 font that tear
20, font that responds and reset to the meaning i amie ne
18 font shat assumes the inoligese #8
20. font that might sense your level of alist, fet
21a font prone to sudden cubs
22 a font thal exceeds the papa
23,3 font whose parents are Father Time and te ahh
24. a ambient fom, 2 fon laGada refers to ulleripratines or cunimans
rote fort ip-syching font, 2 fort without a vole of its own
nit tens wile i speak
oa toggles clertlesely botwoen langues
efor
ing font
Pent that overs, fold, performs, evel, and passos enay
i btie something other than 2 recording
ats tert every time you “play” it
han metabolism of ty
fees fancied esta
mer hao sa et bel
Se Detrcsskin,.
isthe distance frem the baseline
tothe
The cap height ofa ypefaes
eters ils point sin
Some elements my
extend slightly bore
weap height
the
reverte &sthe height
rain body ofthe ow
(or the height ofa lowercase
erclding is ascenders nd
dhscenders
body
thou bids lor to write
wing ruled paper tha divides,
eters exaelly in lf most
types are not designed that
‘ony. The sight usually
cps lightly more than half
ofthe cap height The bigger
the sbeght it rlavon tothe
op height, te higge he eters
of test, the
greet density occurs benveen
the baseline and the top of the
sig
af capital ften
rate uascuie is where all the
letersi This isthe most stable
axis along a line f test, and it
4 crucial edge for atigning text
with images or with other tex
Hey, look!
They supersized
my x-height.
ANATOMY
The cures atthe bot
leters such as 0 0F¢ hang
Slghly below the bosline
Commas an sericolons also
ne Ifa bypefice
were not posiioned this wy
ross the ba
it would appear to leer
prevariousy lacking a sense
of physical grounding
To Blacks of txt
sashace
Here, 14/98 Sol
Gigpl ype withsize
1 points
equal pica
0
fea inch
B
Go-vorer scata
A iypefce is measured
From the top of the
capital letter othe
. htt of the lowest
descender, plus a srl
hfe space.
> tn cape
the point size
isthe height of
he rpe lug,
&
WIDE LOAD
The st wis the body ofthe eter
pls the space hese i
TIGHT WAD
“The leer in the condense version of the peice
hui narrower set with
WIDE LOAD
TIGHT WAD
‘SYPE CRIME:
The proportions of the letters have beer
Agia disiorted in onder ta create wider
Lerten /demonstations 36
HeicHtr Attempts to standardize the measurement
of type began in the eighteenth century. The point
system, used to measure the height of a letter as
vwell as the distance between lines (leading), is the
standard used today. One point equals 1/72 inch
or 35 millimeters. Twelve points equal one pict, the
unit commonly used lo measure colurin widths.
"Typography also can be measured in
inches, millimeters, or pixels, Most software
applications Tet the designer choose a preferred wnit
of measure: picas and points are a standard default.
8 picts 8p
8 points ~ p8, 8 pls
8 picas, 4 points ~ 8p4
point Helvetia with 9 points of Tine spacing =
8/9 Helvetica
wiptit A letter also has a borizontal measure,
called its et wiih, The set width isthe body ofthe
letter plus a sliver of space that protects it from
other letters. The width of a letter is intrinsic to the
proportion of the typeface. Some typefaces have a
narrow set width, and some have a wide one
You can change the set width of typeface by
fiddling with its horizontal or vertical scale
This distorts the proportion of the letters, forcing
hheayy elements to become thin, and thin elements
to become thick. Instead of torturing a letterform,
choose a typeface with the proportions you need,
stich as condensed, compressed, or extended.
ig Ge oolester 37
srr sexta J2nC INTRISTATE REGULAR
sas wooN!
Sar mes RAVES
Do I look fat in this paragraph?
‘These ltrs real the same pont size, but they have diferent
ehelghs line weights, nd proportions.
‘When two typefaces are set in the same point size,
one often looks bigger than the other. Differences
in xheight, line weiglit, and character width affect
the letters’ apparent scale,
nice x-height
Abe wiaverica 48-rr oes zavus
Every typeface wants to know, ‘Do | look fat
in this paragraph? It's all a matter of context.
‘Afont could look perfectly sleek on screen,
yet apoear bulky and oul of shape in print.
Some typefaces are drawn with heavier lines
than others, or they have taller x-heights..
Helvetica isn’t fat. She has big bones.
g)ta mevverien
Every typeface wants to know,
"Do | look fat in this paragraph?”
It's all a matter of context. A font
could look perfectly sleek on
screen, yet appear bulky and
out of shape in print.
13/r4 univerica
Mrs Foves, designed by Zuzana Licko in 1996,
rejects the aweith-cemtury appetite for
supersized scheight. The ft, inspire by the
tighteenth-connany designs ofl Baskerville
Isnamed afer rah Faves, Baskervile's
mises, housekeeper, and collaborator
The coupe lived together for seen years
fore nary in 176.
Bigger weights, introduced inthe twentieth
century, mate fonts loo larger by muaximazing
‘he aren within the oneal point size,
Every typeface wants ¢o know; "De [look fat in this
paragraph?" It's alls matter of contest. A font eould
ook perfectly sleek on screen, yet appear bulky and
out of shape in print. Some typefaces are drawn with
heavier Lines than othees or have taller x-heights. Mrs
Eaves has a low waist and 2 small body.
Every typeface wants to know: "Do I
look fat in this paragraph?” It's all a
matter of context. A font could look
perfectly sleek on sereen, yet appear
bulky and out of shape in print, Mr
Eaves has a low waist and a small body.
raft mes eaves
“The defaal type size in many software applications is 2 ps
Althougle his generally creas readable type on srcen displays,
spt tex! pe usualy looks big and horey on a printed poe.
(12 pls isa good size fr childer's books) Sizes between 9 and 11
>is are common for printed text. This caption is 7.5 ps| Revolver
= 2aCLASSIFICATION
The ramar sypseces of
fifeenth aye sists centuries
ulated sasicaleallgraphy
Sabore was design by
Jane Tih
(on the sisseeethcentury
Iypefces of Clauie Garamond.
ld in 1986, base
LAa
ese typefices have sharper
sea ad more wetical avis
than kusmaisteters, When the
ons of Joh Baskerile were
introduced in the midcghtcenth
tre tr sherp forms an
igh conirast wore considers
shocking
TYPE CLASSIFICATION. A basic system for classifying typefaces was devised
in the nineteenth century, when printers sought to identify a
s to that of art history. Hureanistletterforms are
graphy and the movement of the hand. Transitional
their own craft analogo
closely connected to call
heritage for
and modern typefaces are more abstract and less organic, These three main,
groups correspond roughly to the Renaissance, Baroque, and Enlightenment
periods in art and literature, Historians and critics of typography have since
proposed more finely grained schemes that attempt to better capture the
diversity of letterforms. Designers in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries
have continued to create new typefaces based on histori
unser typeces became
‘mon in th tent
centuny Gil Sans, disipned by
Fre Git
jn ag28, has humanist
claarateites. Note tke sal,
tng cownser in the leer,
‘ral the calligraphic variations
inline wright,
characteristics.
Haltica, designed bp Max
Mienger in 195
the word's most widely used
Iypefces. ts uniform, upright
character makes it similar to
transitional seri letrs, These
fons are also refer to at
‘anonymous sans erie”
Aa
‘The ypefaces designed by
Ginmbrtista Bodo i the ave
eh
enres are radically abstract
[Note he thin, senight serif
‘axis and sharp contrast
eighteen ad ely nin
Fron thick to thin stro
Aa
Nutnerowe bold decor
fnpefaces were introduced ithe
for use in
ints we
hineteenth cont
adverisng. gyi
heavy, abi serif
a
Some sansserif types are but
sound geoetie formes,
ny Futura, designed bp Pat
Renner 1937, the Os are
eet circles, ara the peaks
ofthe & and M are sharperrr 43,
Sabon
14:rr saB0N
Baskerville
gee DASKERUTLLE
Bodoni
14:Pr noDoN
Clarendon
srr ctanennow
Gill Sans
yer on sans
Helvetica
Lgrr xriverrca
Futura
rqerr vurons
This is not a book about fonts. It is a book about
how to use them. Typefaces are essential resources
for the graphic designer, just as glass, stone, steel,
and other materials are employed by the architect
9/12 sanon
is is not a book about fonts, It is a book about
how to use them. Typefaces are essential resources
for the graphic designer, just as glass, stone, steel,
‘and other materials are employed by the architect.
9/12 nAskenvttin
‘This is not a book about fonts. It is « book about how
to use them. Type sssential resources for the
‘graphic designer, just as glass, stone, steel, and other
materials are employed by the architect
9.5/12 bopont aa0x
‘This is not a book about fonts. It is a book about:
how to uso them. Typelaces are essential resources:
for the graphic designer, just as glass, stone, steel,
and other materials are employed by the architect
Bj12 claweNDON GAT
“This is nat a book about fonts. Ics 00k about how
to use them. Typefaces are essential resources for the
graphic designer, just as glass, stone, steel, and other
materials are employed by the architect. _
9/12 Gut sans REGULAR
This Is not a book about fonts, It is a book about how
to use them. Typefaces are essential resources for the
graphic designer, just as glass, stone, steel, and other
materials are employed by the architect.
8/ia werverica neGuLAn
‘This is not a book about fon's. It's @ book about how
to-use them, Typefaces are essen‘ial resources for the
‘araphic designer, just os glass, sione, slee, and other
materials cre employed by the architect.
8.5/1 eurunA 00%
CLASSIFICATION
Selecting eype with
wit and wisdom
rexqires Knowle
fof how and why
Jerertorms evolved
79
Selecting type with
‘vit and sso
raguces kaowledge
fo ow and why
Jeterforms evolved,
7i9
Selootne te with
wit and wisdorn
ean knowledge
sf wa why
leterornsexalved
2519
Betesing typ wit
reultes knowledge
619
Selecting ype wit
cand wisdom
Fequies inowledge
cof how and wy
Iorertors evived
zs
Solcing ype wie
‘wt and wieder
roquios krowdge of
Ianoroms vole
619)
Selecting type wth
wit ane wisdom
recites knowledge
oF how an why
leterorms evche.
65/9uervow | 44
| EMCSWEENEY’S|
i
i
i
i
il
1
\}
\\
\| KNOW THEM. REMEMBERING!
|! KNOW THEM eYOUR | 1
i} Tae TALK! WEAK ortiNG Ms}
| CARRY [Link] REMEMBERING!
| KEEP 1T SWEET. FYouMUST =F4 we
; SOR TOITATE REMEMBERING!
| MORE rorYOUR wal
And yet: F SAKE 749 THEIRS
q EFFLORIESCENCE
Da yon sense it?
CANADA | LATE SUNATER
500 US,
EARLY FALL
| sii | 2°02) $Ssurrren | 45 FAMILIES
“The idea of organizing typefaces into matched
Jamilies dates back to the sixteenth century, when
Adobe Garamond wns designed by Robert slimbac in 1988 printers began coordinating roman and italic faces.
The concept was formalized at the tum of the
twentieth century
‘The roman font is the core or spine from which a family of typefaces derives.
The roman fom, also called “pla” or “raglan” the
standard, upright versian ofa aypoice. 1s ypcaly conceived
fs the parent of larger fay
Iralic forts, which are based on cursive writing, have forms distinct from roman.
‘The aie form i no simply a mechanically lanted version of the
roman: 5a separate typeface. Noe that the leer a has a diferent
‘Shape inthe roman and italic variants of Adobe Garamond.
GHT THAT IS SIMILAR TO the lowercase X-HEIGHT.
‘Small caps (rapitals) are designed to integrate with a line of test,
where fli capitals would stand out aura, Small capitals
fre slight taller than the height ef fowercase liters
SMALL CAPS HAVE A HE.
pone CANAMOND EXPERT {SMAIE CAPS)
Bold (and semibold) typefaces are used for emphasis within a hierarchy.
Bold versions of trtonal text fois were aun the twenties
century 20 meet the need for emphatic ors. Sans-serif fries
fle include a broad range of weights (thin, bold, back, et.)
Bold (and semibold) typefaces each need to include an italic version, too.
“The type designer tries to make the bold versions et somitar
in conteat to the rena, without making the overall form 00
heavy. The eoyters need to stay clear an ope. at smal sizes,
fining (123) and non-lining (323).
Lining numeral oeerpy wniforne units of horizontal space, 50
that the numbers le up wher used fn tabulated columas.
[Nondining numerals als called “text or “ld syle” numerals,
have a small body size plus ascenders ad descenslers. so tat,
they rns wel oa ine wit lowercase eters
A fill type family has wo sets of numerals
A ape family can Be faked by s/ancing, or inflating, or SHRINKING letters.
Thewide, ungnty Padded wound the Thee shrunken
firms ofthe slowed ee, tee eters versions offilsize
teers look fred fel nt and dail caps repay
dna unnatural and stared.BIG FAMILIES
THESIS FAMILY
arrrer | 46
Designed by Lucas de Grool, LucasFons, 1994
“Thess is one ofthe worlds langst type fens,
This is not a book about fonts. It is a book about how to use them. Typefaces
are essential resources for the graphic designer, just as glass, stone, steel, and
OTHER MATERIALS ARE EMPLOYED BY THE ARCHITECT, SOME DESIGNERS CREATE.
their own custom fonts. But most
graphic designers will tap the vast
store of already existing typefaces,
choosing and combining each with
regard to the audience or situation.
Selecting type with wit and wisdom
requires knowledge of how and why
letterforms have evolved. The history
of typography reflects a continual tension between the hand and machine, the
organic and geometric, the human body and the abstract system. These tensions
MARKED THE BIRTH OF PRINTED LETTERS FIVE CENTURIES AGO, AND THEY CONTINUE TO
energize typography today. Writing
in the West was revolutionized early
in the Renaissance, when Johannes
Gutenberg introduced moveable type
in Germany. Whereas documents and
books had previously been written by
hand, printing with type mobilized all
of the techniques of mass productionever | 47
Interstate Light
Interstate Light Compressed
Interstate Light Condensed
Interstate Regular
Interstate Regular Compressed
Interstate Regular Condensed
Interstate Bold
Interstate Bold Compressed
Interstate Bold Condensed
Interstate Black
Interstate Black Compressed
Interstate Black Condensed
Designed by Tobias Perens, Font Burean, 1903
nnn ppp
Scala Scala Sans
Scala Htalic Scala Sans Italic
Scata Caps SCALA SANS CAPS
Scala Sans Bold
Scala Sans Bold
Scala Bold
Martin Majors Seal,
sa irouphout his hoo,
SCALA
L CRYSTAL,
SCALA JEWEL DIAMOND
Majoors dog above
SCALA JEWEL PEARL
SCALA JEWEL SAPHYR
shows bow she serif and sans
seniors have a conson
BIG FAMILIES
Serie ae eam pete ae i
Fi ag He ae See of Ud |
Raid eat Vices erp
‘uns conceived asa total system fom isn
A traditional roman book face typically
group
consisting of roman, italic, small
caps, and possibly bold and sernibeld
(cach with an italic variant). Sans-serif
famili
weights and sizes, such as thin, light,
black, compressed, and condensed.
In the 1990s, many type designers
created families that include both serif
has a small family—a “min
ofien come in many more
and sans-serif versions. Small capitals
and nondining numeral
traditionally reserved for serif
are inchided in the sans-serif versions
of Thesis, Sea
and many other bigDESIGNING TYPEFACES
‘ZEABCDEF
G H IJ KL M zcerren | 49
BEDE
Castaways
Drawing and finished type, 2001
Ast and type directign: Andy Cruz
“Types design: Ken Barber
Font engineering: Rich Rost
House Industries
Cito fom a eres of digital fonts based on
‘commercial signs Las Vagos, The orignal signs were
created by fteringavtsis who worked by hand to make
som graphs ad lgos, House Industries sa digo
ype found tha creates fypefaves inspired by popular
cature eed design history. Designer Ken Barherpnakis
onc drawings by hand ad then diitizes the oalines,
MMNOST
DESIGNING TYPEFACES
albeccaljkkunn
ECSEL
For more than five hundred years, typeface
production was an industrial process. Most type
was cast from lead until the rise of photo typesetling
in the 1960s and 1970s; early digital typefaces
{also created in that period) still sequited specialized
equipment for design and production. It was not
until the introduction of desktop computers that
typeface design became a widely accessible field.
By the end of the twentieth century, digital “type
foundries” had appeared around the globe, often
run by one or two designers,
Producing a complete typeface remains,
however, an enormous task. Even a relatively small
type family has bundreds of distinet chat
each requiring many phases of refinement. The
typeface designer must also determi
is to be spaced, what software platforms it will use
and how it will fenction in different sizes, media
and languages,
how a fontLocoTyrEs serran | 52
Ingenieubiro
Infermations- und
Funitechri
Johannes Hubner
Yel 0361-4272181 aay
Identity program, 1998
Banaustrafe 21
1109 Oresdon woes the etter Has at
the mark
hannes-huebner de
HiUbner =x
annes-huebnerdeLocoTyPEs
LoGoTyres use typography or lettering to depict
the name of an organization in a memorable way.
Whereas some trademarks consist of an abstract
symbol or a pictorial icon, a iegotype uses letters
to create a distinctive visual image
Logotypes can be built with exist
or with custom-drawn letierforms, Modern
logotypes are often designed in different versions
for use in different situations. A logotype is part
fonts
an overall identity program, which the designer
logotypes, 2003
Designer: Anton Ginzburg
“These logotypes fora fashion i
lexan
manier, Writing the
museum sen
Moran St
the
ave wile a element of
2004
Designers: Abbot Miller and
Jeremy Hoffman, Pentag
1 reference tothe work of seme Noguchi
tamesake ofthe Noguchi Museum, Te concave
agave coordinates wih the kypefice Balance
hi als ae satee
BITMAP FONTS terra | 56
| bitmap fonts are designed for digital display,
fitmap fonts are desiqned for digital display at @ specific size,
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display.
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display.
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display at a specific size,
Bitinap fonts are designed for digital display at a specific size.
nigre, 1085
imigre, Enyperr, Ona ancl Univeral fom fi
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display at spec ze.
Bitmap fonts are designed for digitat display at specific size,
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display at specific size.
Bitmap fonts ere designed for digital displey at a specific size.
Designed by Chester for Thirsty
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display at a specific size.
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display at a specific size.
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display at a specific size.
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display ot a specific size.
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display at a specific size.
Bitmap fonts are designed for digital display at a specific size.
igital display at a specific size. i
|
i
|
|
|
Bitmap fonts are designed for
Sent ree conronare: Designed by
) These fonts are designed
himedia aedhoring applicationwerren| 57
Bima FoNTS ate built out of the pixels
{picture elements) that structure a screen display.
Whereas a PostScript letter consists of a vectorized
culling, a bitmap character contains a fixed number
of rectilinear units that are either “on” or “off.”
Outline fonts are scatable, meaning that they
can be reproduced in a high-resolution medium
such as print at nearly any size. Outline fonts are
offen hard to read on screen at small sizes, however,
where all characters are translated into pixels. (Anti-
aliasing can make legibility even worse for small
text) Ina bitmap font, the pixels do not melt away
asthe letiers get bigger: Some designers like to
‘exploit this effect, which calls altention to the letters’
digital geometry. Pixel fonts are widely used in both
print and digital media
8px Corporate
16,, Corporate
24, Corporate
32,..Corporate
A bitmap int i designed to be wsed at a spelfic
see, sce as 8 pivels, becouse ts Bey is precisely
‘ansructe out of screen units bitmap font
Should be display on sreen in ver uiples of
fits root size (enlange Sp type 106,24. 32. aed
soon)
BITMAP FONTS
IBDEKHPHOEL NLTHOF & LEE
SSTAALSTRART 15-8
1011 JK FANSTERDAK
22/05/03 13812 it
9000 #0094 BEDL
VERZENDKOST.. 42.50
TVPOGRAFTE 6.00
TPOGRAFIE 16.50
TPORRAFIE 19.50
‘TPOGRAFIE 5.5
TWPOGRAFIE 5.35
TUPOGRAF IE 32.00
TYPOGRAFIE 59.00
‘TPOGRAFIE 40.00
TWPOGRAFIE 30.40
‘TPOGRAFIE 87.25
TYPOGRAF IE 20.00
‘TUPCIGRAF TE 37.70
SUBTOTAL 520.15
BTW LaAG 29.44.
STUKS 130
RT 520.15
OOK ANTTOUARTAAT
TEL!020-6205960
FAK: 020-6393274
xiner & are
Receipt, 2003
‘This cash register reel,
pind ih abana fr,
Issam a design and
typegraphy bookstare tn
Amsterdam. (The author
stl ie debt from this
sansaetion.)LETTER EXERCISE oo
Create a prototype for a bitmap font by
designing letters on a grid of squares.
raditional letterforms with rectilinear a a
elements. Avoid making detailed
“staircases,” which are just curves and
back to the t9ros and 192¢s, when avant-
ea ners made experimental
pefaces out of simple geometric parts
The project also zeflects the structure of 7
digital technologies, from cash register
receipts and LED sighs to on-screen fon a a a:
display, showing how a typeface functions
as a system of elements
Esumples of tude work from
Malan! tutte Colege af an
Hi“Typographic installation in Grand Central Station,
New York City 995
Designer: Stephen Deyle
Client; The New York State Division of Women
Sponsors: The New York State Division of Women,
the Metiopolitan Thansportation Authority, Revlon,
and Merrill LynelyTEXTreer | 62
Poster, 1996
Designer: Hayes Henderson
Rasher then represent
cierspace asa ethereal gi,
he designer has ased blotches
of everdayping tex to build an
tins, oops badTEXT
LETTERS GATHER INTO WORDS, WORDS BUILD INTO SENTENCES,
In typography, “text” is defined as an ongoing sequence of words, distinct
shorter headlines or captions. The main block is often called the
“running
" comprising the principal mass of content. Also known a
text,” itcan flow from one page, column, or box to another, Text can be
viewed as a thing—a sound and sturdy object—or a fluid poured into the
containers of page or screen. Text can be solid or liquid, body or blood.
‘As body, text has more integrity and wholeness than the elements
that surround it, from pictures, captions, and page numbers to banners,
butions, and menus. Designers generally treat a body of text consistently
letting it appear as a coherent substance that is distributed across the spaces
ofa document. In digital media, long texts are typically broken into chunks
that can be accessed by search engines or hypertext links. Contemporary
designers and writers produce content for various contexts, from the pages
of print to an array of software environments, screen conditions, and digital
devices, each posing its own limits and opportunities,
Designers provide ways into—and out ofthe flood of words
by breaking up text into pieces and offering shorteuts and alternate routes
through masses of information. From 4 simple indent (signaling the
entrance to a new idea) to a highlighted link announcing a jump to another
location), typography helps readers navigate the flow of content. The user
could be searching for a specific piece of data or struggling to quickly
process a volume of content in order to extract elements for immediate use.
Although many books define the purpose of typography as enbancing the
readability of the written word, one of design’s most humane functions is,
in actuality, to help readers avoid reading.Toot 7 eres
earnfurr ant nnplenrcdetiiorem
emer ipfte-non confimieri aim
mrimiminffiinfinprmesy
carLonmes quetimenctominay
qurambutancin ntfs th :
mes Manttrm Mar amar
cabis-Wamnfeo tiene abr
2 Hee ‘babrndan
1M
ace seen
tonaremafalem ommibsdieb:
t Nite ery
s filtos filtonm moy-jueituxt | 65
Marshall McLuhan,
The Gutenberg Galazy
(Foronto: University of
Toronto Press, 1962).
(On te future of
{intellectual property, see
Lawrence Lessig, ree
Culture: How Big Media
es Trnagy andthe Law
to Lack Down Culinre aid
Contr Creativiny (New
York: Penguin, 2004}
ERRORS AND OWNERSHIP
‘Typography helped seal the literary notion of “the text” as a complete,
original work, a stable body of ideas expressed in an essential form. Before
the invention of printing, handwritten documents were riddled with errors.
Copies were copied from copies, each with its own glitches and gaps.
Scribes devised inventive ways to insert missing lines into manuscripts in
order to salvage and repair these laboriously crafted objects,
Printing with movable type was the first system of mass
production, replacing the hand-copied manuscript. As in other forms of
suring its correctness, and
mass production, the cost of setting type,
running a press drops for each unit as the size of the print run increases,
Labor and capital are invested in tooling and preparing the technology,
rather than in making the individual unit. The printing system allows
editors and authors to correct a work as it passes from handwritten
‘manuscript to typographic galley. “Proofs” are test copies made before final
production begins. The proofteader's craft ensures the faithfulness of the
printed text to the author's handwritten original
Yet even the text that has passed through the castle gates of
print is inconstant, Each edition ofa book represents one fossil record of a
text, a record that changes every time the work is translated, quoted,
revised, interpreted, or taught. Since the rise of digital tools for writing
and publishing, manuscript originals have all but vanished. Bleetomie
sedlining-is seplacing the bieeoglpphies of the-editor, On-line texts can be
downloaded by users and reformatted, repurposed, and recombined.
Print helped establish the figure of the author as the owner of a
text, and copyright laws were written in the early eighteenth century to
protect the author's rights to this property. The digital age is riven by battles
between those who argue, on the one hand, for the fundamental liberty of
data and ideas, and those who hope to protect—sometimes indefinitely—
the investment made in publishing and authoring content.
A lassic typographic page emphasizes the completeness and
closure of a work, its authority as a finished product. Alternative design
strategies in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries reflect the contested
nature of authorship by revealing the openness of texts to the flow of
information and the cozosiveness of history.
‘Typography tended to alter language from a means of perception and exploration
toa portable commodity. Marshall McLuhan, 1962Book, 1985
Designer: Richard Eckersley
Author: Avital Ronell
Compositor: Michael Jensen
Publisher: University of
Nebraska Press
Photograph: Dan Meyers
This boo, philosophical step
of writing as @ matefid ;
technology ses typography
to emphasize the rhetorical
argument ofthe text, This
spread, for example, is factared
bp typographic rivers,” spaces
‘ha connect vertically through
the page. Rivers vila the
ven, unified estar hat sa ||
sacred goa! within traditional
Iapographi desig. |
(On fle Wy Largs
How snledeaMl Tain ny aqgumentarsomesingnlsr denon
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non? And hen, 8 mowing proyersamerntamout ta kawng
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int as ras anypouilecesbion concerned iy eam:
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city: they samen nce owas increasing the res af
anim inetninton ar olf arte opacity Koreans and oe
cenlingor, inher wos for con} and slFagalation” (MC. 3).
Weta to dice bow se smlemcty of determining, enig
arciern —supecning forme dep coperation with he nent
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appease Taing pacshis beso the metined —_ systonsicy
fthemem which Deriashows alway calyto—fllunder2
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aesur | 67
SPACING
Design is as much an act of spacing as an act of marking. The typographer’s
art concerns not only the positive grain of letterforms, but the negative gaps.
between and around them. In letterpress printing, every space is constructed
by a physical object, « blank piece of metal or wood with no raised image.
‘The faceless slugs of lead and slivers of copper inserted as spaces between
words or letters are as physical as the relief characters around them. Thin.
strips of lead (called “leading") divide the horizontal lines of type; wider
blocks of “furniture” hold the margins of the page.
Although we tale the breaks between words for granted, spoken
language is perceived as a continuous flow, with no audible gaps. Spacing
has become crucial, however, to alphabetic writing. which translates the
sounds of speech into multiple characters. Spaces were introduced after the
invention of the Greek alphabet to make words intelligible as distinct units,
‘Tryreadingalineoftextwithoutspacingtosechowimportantithasbecome.
With the invention of typography, spacing and punctuation ossified
from gap and gesture to physical artifact. Punctuation marks, which were
used differently fom one scribe to another in the manuscript era, became
part of the standardized, rule-bound apparatus of the printed page. The
communications scholar Walter Ong has shown how printing converted the
word into a visual object precisely located in space: “Alphabet letterpress
printing, in which each letter was cast on a separate piece of metal, or type, marked a psychological
dreakthrough of the first order...Print situates words in space more relentlessly than writing ever did.
Writing moves words from the sound world to the world of visual space, but print locks words into
Wialier Ong, Oralty and
Fiteraey: The Tehlogiing
‘ofthe Neri (London
nnd New Yorls Methuen
1981, See also Jacques
Dertiéa, Of Grammtalgy
tnins, Gaya Chakravory
Spivak (Baltimore: Joan
Hopkins Univers Pues,
1976).
position in this space.” Typogeaphy made text into a thing, a material object
with known dimensions and fixed locations.
‘The French philosopher Jacqués Derrida, who devised the theory
of deconstruction in the 1960s, wrote that although the alphabet represents
sound, it cannot function without silent marks and spaces. Typogeaphy
manipulates the silent dimensions of the alphabet, employing habits and
techniques—such as spacing and punctuation—that are seen but not heard.
The alphabet, rather than evolve into a transparent code for recording
speech, developed its own visual resources, becoming 2 more powerful
technology as it left bebind its connections to the spoken word.
That a speech supposedly alive can lend itself to spacing in its
own writing is what relates to its own death. Jacques Derrida, 1976text | 68
LINEARITY
“From Work to Text,” the French critic Roland Barthes presented
sus the open
aged object,
two opposing models of writing: the closed, fixed “work” v
unstable “text.” In Barthes’s view, the work is a tidy, neatly pa
proofread and copyrighted, made perfect and complete by the art of printing.
The text, in contrast, is impossible to contain, operating across a dispersed
web of standard plots and received ideas. Barthes pictured the text as “woven entirely with citations
references, echoes, cultural languages (what language is not?), antecedent and contemporary, which
cut actoss and through in a vast stereophony....The metaphor of the Text is that of the network.”
Writing in the 1960s and 1970s, Barthes anticipated the Internet as a Roland Barthes, “From
Work to Tex.” Jmage/
decentralized web, of connections.
nothes was descbing bterature, yet his ideas resonate for aa
typography, the visual manifestation of language. The singular “body” of and Wang, 1977), 155-64
ional features
the traditional text page has long been supported by the navi
‘of the book, from page mumbers and headings that mark a reader's location
to such tools as the index, appendix, abstract, footnote, and table of contents.
These devices were able to emerge because the typographic book is 2 fixed
sequence of pages, a body lodged in a grid of known coordinates.
All such devices are attacks on linearity, providing means of
entrance and escape from the oneaway stream of discourse. Wherees
talking flows in a single direction, writing occupies space as well as time.
Tapping that spatial dimension—and thus Liberating readers from the
bonds of Linearity—is among typography’s most urgent tasks
Although digital media are commonly celebrated for their potential
as nonlinear potential communication, linearity nonetheless thrives in the
electronic realm, from the “CNN craw!" that marches along the bottom of
the television screen to the ticker-style LED signs that loop throtigh the
urban environment. Film titles—the celebrated convergence of typography
and cinema—serve to distract the audience from the inescapable tedium
of a contractually decreed, top-down disclosure of ownership and authorship.
.inearity dominates many of the commercial software applications
that have claimed to revolutionize everyday writing and communication,
Word processing programs, for example, treat documents as a linear stream.
(In contrast, page layout programs such as Quark XPress and Adobe
InDesign allow users to work spatially, breaking up text into columns and
A text...is a multi-dimensional space in which a variety of writings,
none of them original, blend and clash. Roland Barthes, 1974ter | 69
pages that can be anchored and landmarked.) PowerPoint and other
processing, see Nancy Kapli®, presentation software programs are supposed to illuminate the spoken word
thie tobienst! Ours by guiding the audience through the linear unfolding ofan ral address
Image andthe Word,” Typically, however, PowerPoint enforces the one-way flow of speech rather
‘uodey/Weitey Torts. 32 than alleviating it. While a single sheet of paper could provide a map or
are ae oe) summary ofan oral presentation, a PowerPoint show drags out in time
Be Tle, “The Cognitive le
of PowerPoint,” (Cheshire Not all digital media favor linear flow over spatial arrangement,
Com: Grphics Tres. 2003). however. The database, one of the defining information stzuctures of our
time, is an essentially nonlinear form. Providing readers and writers with
a simultaneous menu of options, a database is a system of elements that
can be arranged in countless sequences. Page layouts are built on the fly
fromn freestanding chunks of information, assembled in response to user
feedback. The Web is pushing authors, editors, and designers to work
inventively with new modes of “microcontent” (page titles, key words, alt
tags) that allow data to be searched, indexed, bookmarked, translated into
audio, or otherwise marked for recall.
Databases are the steucture behind electronic games, magazines,
On the aethetics of the and catalogues, genres that create an information space rather than a linear
dts see lev Manvel. sequence. Physical stores and libraries are databases of tangible objects found
Caen ite inthe built environment, Media critic Lev Manovich has described language
2002) itself as a kind of database, an archive of elements from which people
assemble the linear utterances of speech. Many design projects call for the
emphasis of space over sequence, system over utterance, simultaneous
structure over linear narrative. Contemporary design often combines aspects:
of architecture, typography, film, wayfinding, branding, and other modes
of address, By dramatizing the spatial quality of a project, designers can
foster understanding of complex documents or environments,
The history of typography is marked by the increasingly sophis
cated use of space, In the digital age, where characters are accessed by
keystroke and mouse, not gathered from heavy drawers of manufactured
units, space has become more liquid than concrete, and typography has
evolved from a stable body of objects to a flexible system of attributes.
across numerous screens.
Database and narrative are natural enemies. Competing for the same territory of human culture,
each claims an exclusive right to make meaning of the world. Lev Manovich, 2002“e
wifes ™
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Designers: Phumb Design Inc.
‘This diptal thesaurus presents words witha threrdimensional
web of relationships. The central term is tink to noes representing
‘hat wor dierent senses. The mare connctions each of these
elite nodes contains, the bigger end closer it appears on the
sree, Clicking on a satelite wort brings Hat frm othe center.intirsligy®
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Succeeding the Author, the scriptor no longer bears within him passions,
humours, feelings, impressions, but rather this immense dictionary from
which he draws a writing that can know no halt. Roland Barthes, 1968Karzeet’ EmeCoy
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: ‘henner Sosa faba i ao ie, vy
haan clave alle colony va, cncdito, a aublimity oie?
: Mach ofthe work dquo a Crantiook hasbeen dred
nctatng tess
spleen oraflesesine fester AdBook, 1990
Designers:
Katherine MeCoy,
B, Scott Makela, and
Mary Low Krol
Publisher: Rizoll
Photographs Dan Meyers
Under the Wrecion of
igkerine and Michael McCoy
the graduate progr in
phic ond inlet desige
Cranbrook: Academy of Art
vasa ang eee for
tayerimenal desig fom ts
1gye through the enty spas.
Katherine McCoy devcloped
a mode of typography os
course," whic the designer
fan reader acivelp interpret.
br cathor tev
BIRTH OF THE USER
Roland Barthes’s model of the text as an open web of references, rather than
a closed and perfect work, asserts the importance of the reader over the
writer in creating meaning, ‘The reader “plays” the text as a musician plays
an instrument. The author does not control its significance: “the text itself
plays (like a door, ike a machine with ‘play’) and the reader plays twice over,
playing the Text as one plays a game, looking for a practice that reproduces
iv’ (102), Like an interpretation of a musical score, reading is a performance
of the written word.
Graphic designers embraced the idea of the readerly text in the
1980s and early 19908, using layers of text and interlocking grids to explore
Barthes's theory of the “death of the author.” In place of the classical model
of typography 2s a crystal goblet for content, this alternative view assumes
that content itself changes with each act of representation. Typography
becomes a mode of interpretation.
Redefining typography as “discourse,” designer Katherine MeCoy
imploded the traditional dichotomy between seeing and reading, Pictures
can be read (analyzed, decoded, taken apart), and words can be seen
(perceived as icons, forms, patterns). Valuing ambiguity and complexity, her
approach challenged readers to produce their own meanings while trying.
also to elevate the status of designers within the process of authorship.
Another model, which undermined the designer's new claim to
power, surfaced at the end of the 1990s, borrowed no} from literary criticism
but from human-computer interaction (HCl) studies and the fields of
interface and usability design. ‘The dominant subject of our age has become
neither reader nor writer but user, a figure conceived as a bundle of needs
and impairments—cognitive, physical, emotional. Like a patient or child, the
user is a figure to be protected and cared for but also scrutinized and
controlled, submitted to research and testing,
How texts are used becomes more important than what they mean,
Someone clicked hexe to get over there. Someone who bought this also
bought that. The interactive environment not only provides users with a
degree of control and selfdirection but also, more quietly and insidiously it
gathers data about its audiences. Rarthes’s image of the text as a game to be
played still holds, as the user respond to signals from the system. We may
play the text, but itis also playing ts
Design a human-machine interface in accordance with the abilities and foibles of humankind,
and you will help the user not only get the job done, but be a happier, more productive person,
Jef Raskin, 2000nese | 94)
Graphic designers can use theories of user interaction to revisit On sicen rsd,
some of our basic assumptions about visual communication. Why, for see Jon D, Goulet
example, are readers on the Web less patient than readers of print? It is Biren
commonly believed that digital displays are inherently more difficult to read from Mapes Sumas fac
than ink on paper. Yet HCI studies conducted in the late 1980s proved that 29»5 W987 497-57
cxisp black text on a white background can be read just as efficiently from a
scrcen as from a printed page
The impatience of the digital reader arises from culture, not from On the ssless use see
the essential character of display technologies. Users of Web sites have Jakob Nielsen, Designing |
Web Usability tnanapols
different expectajions than users of print. They expect to feel “productive,” New Riders, 2000).
arch mode, not processing mode.
not contemplative, They expect to be in
Users also expect to be disappointed, distracted, and delayed by false leads,
“The cultural habits of the screen ave driving changes in design for print,
while at the same time affirming priat’s role as a place where extended
reading can still occur.
‘Another common assumption is that icons are a more universal Ov the lure of inex
mode of communication than text. Icons are central to the GUIs (graphical Kens see fel sk
Ee ae oe ty acetal eee a
ofien provide a more specific and understandable cue than a picture. Teons ——injraaive Spica Ra
Mass: Addison-Wesley, 2000)
don’t actually simplify the translation of content into multiple languages,
because they require explanation in multiple languages. The endless icons
of the digital desktop, often rendered with gratuitous detail and depth,
fanction more to enforce brand identity than to support usability. In the
twentieth century, modern designers hailed pictures as a “universal”
language, yet in the age of code, text has become a more common denom- |
inator than images—searchable, translatable, and capable of being
reformatted and restyled for alternative or future media,
Perhaps the most persistent impulse of twenticth-century art and }
design was to physically integrate form and content. The Dada and Futurist
poets, for example, used typography to create texts whose content was
inextricable from the concrete layout of specific letterforms on a page. In the
twentyefirst century, form and content axe being pulled back apart. Style
sheets, for example, compel designers to think globally and systematically |
instead of focusing on the fixed construction of a particular surface, This way
Web users don’t like to read... They want to keep moving and clicking.
Jakob Nielsen, 2000
EeeOn ransmedia design
thinking, see Brenda Laurel,
Chapa Bntrerencar
|Cambridge: MIT Press,
2001)
Jef Raskin tals about the
scarciy of human attention
as ell as the myth of white
space in The Humane
Ieaces New Directions fr
Designing Interactive Systems,
ied on p74
of thinking allows content to be reformatted for different devices or users,
and it also prepares for the afterlife of data as electronic storage media begin
their own cycles of decay and obsolescence.
In the twentieth centus nodern artists and critics asserted that
each medium is specific. They defined film, for example, as a constructive
language distinct from theater, and they described painting as a physical
medium that refers to its own processes, Today, however, the medium is not
always the message. Design has become a “transmedia" enterprise, as
authors and producers create worlds of characters, places, situations, and
interactions that can appear across a variety of products, A game might live
in different versions on a video screen, 2 desktop computer, a game console,
and a cell phone, as well as on t-shirts, lunch boxes, and plastic toys.
‘The beauty and wonder of “white space” is another modernist
myth that is subject to revision in the age of the user. Modern designers
discovered that open space on a page can have as much physical presence as
printed areas. White space is not always a mental kindness, however. Edward
Tule, a fierce advocate of visual density, argues for maximizing the amount
of data conveyed on a single page or screen, In order to help readers make
connections and comparisons as well as to find information quickly, a single
surface packed with well-organized information is sometimes better than
multiple pages with a lot of blank space. In typography as in urban life,
density invites intimate exchange among people and ideas.
In our much-fabled era of information overload, a person can
still process only one message at a time. This brute fact of cognition is the
secret behind magic tricks: sleights of hand occur while the attention
of the audience is drawn elsewhere. Given the fierce competition for their
attention, users have a chance to shapetthe information economy by
choosing what to Jook at, Designers can help them make satisfying choices.
“Typography is an interface to the alphabet. User theory tends to
favor normative solutions over innovative ones, pushing design into the
background. Readers usually ignore the typographic interface, gliding
comfortably along literacy's habitual groove. Sometimes, however, the
interface should be allowed to fail. By making itself evident, typography can
illuminate the construction and identity of a page, screen, place, or product.
If people weren't good at finding tiny things in long lists, the Wall Street
Journal would have gone out of business years ago. Jef Raskin, 2000TYPOGRAPHY, INVENTED IN THE RENAISSANCE, allowed text to become @
fixed and stable form, Like the body of the letter, the body of text was.
transformed by print into an industrial commodity that gradually became
more open and flexible.
Critics of electronic media have noted that the rise of networked
communication did not lead to the much feared destruction of typography
{or even to the death of print), but rather to the burgeoning of the alphabetic
empire, As Peter Lunenfeld points out, the computer has revived the power
and prevalence of writing: “Alphanumeric text has risen from its own ashes,
a digital phoenjy taleing flight on monitors, across networks, and in the
realms of virtual space.” The computer display is moze hospitable to text
than the screens of film or television because it offers physical proximity,
user control, and a scale appropriate to the body.
‘The book is no longer the chief custodian of the written word
Branding is a powerful variant of iteracy that revolves around symbols,
icons, and typographic standards, leaving its marks on buildings, packages,
allum covers, Web sites, store displays, and countless other surfaces and
spaces. With the expansion of the Internet, new (and old) conventions for
displaying text quickly congealed, adapting metaphors from print and
architecture: window, frame, page, banner, menu, Designers working within
this stream of mukiple media confront text in myriad forms, giving shape to
extended bodies but also to headlines, decks, captions, notes, pull quotes,
logotypes, navigation bars; alt tags, and other prosthetic clumps of language
that announce, support, and even eclipse the main body of text.
‘The dissolution of writing is most extreme in the realm of the
Web, where distracted readers safeguard their time and prizé function over
form. This debt-of restlessness is owed not to the essential nature of
computer monitors, but to the new behaviors engendered by the Internet, @
place of searching and finding, scanning and mining, The reader, having
toppled the author's seat of power during the twentieth century, now ails
and lags, replaced by the dominant subject of our own era: the w
whose scant attention is our most coveted commodity. Do not squ
> a figure
nder it,
Hypertext means the end of the death of literature. 5
art Moulthrop, 199)
rext | 76
m clectronic writing, sce
Peter Lunenfeld, Snap to
Grids A User's Guide to
Digital Ans, Medi and
Cultures (Cambridge: MIT
Press, 2001) Jay David
Bolter, Writing Space
Computers, Hypertst, and
dhe Remediation of Print
(Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence
Exbauin Associates, 200)
andl Stuart Moultrop, “You
Say You Want a Revoltion?
Hypertext and the Laws
of Media,” The New Media
Poade, el. Noal Wari
Fruin and Nick Monfor,
(Cambridge: MIT Press,
2003), 6gt-705ine = se H- wees - vs
Yeb site, 2005
sin of visual deny
and annozates Hinks to ater
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Enbvoidery wocdanvingy wl nioutely detailed caramic slszes are
ottechnigiesyweostally associatewilh contemacraryactand deen
Those ageold msthods sonstheless psy «prominent parti fae wre
ol ever cute anistsanddesoners)ineusing Berend Sick Win
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{ute old rats; ane nw subject matter For one ef his-besthnown
pieses|Utie, 1099), Stk pasion gaping lemaisrmouthslnavovscut
{aye sina umberet phalusesjand necentuaieathe ip suilnes
wilh legantlines ci crs-ttching ane other oranenta embroldery.
“Thorouificallon ton pis the-epsctalor kway from hecho rome
tape internation spt suddenbrtho stains aheiwveny chow
Econo emerge from those unmistakably luricius lis The peblice
‘ion of Fenech hilosopnor Giorces Batalles uook fs armes Eras
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‘wth sexual death and volenoe: StAle:subjet fe the same: His
‘usintembiokeryteshn quechellengestbeypoersyithhich past
oak, 2003,
Designers: COMA, AunsterdamNew York
Author: Louise Schouwenberg
Publisher: Phaidon
Photographs Dan MeyersTHe BEGINNING
Llookedinto the form without realy knowing it at firs; [sow walls
Ipjng across space The tilting planes cinbad and cut ito each other,
‘oer, shatzering any notion of building in the conventional sense.
[nd the sialogue bagon between Dariel Libeskind and myself, how
oul sucha form be built?
that is then clad and
1 Second to transparency.
a faite orwasit culls out of
‘U5t0 look for the radies ae
Tsk, 2002
Designer: Januzzi Smith
Auilior: Cell Balmmond
Publisher: Peestel
Photograpl: Dan Meyers
"This book sw manifesto
Jor as “infernal” ape
ssrucal englnering and
architecture, Thrugout the
Book, the typography combines
lst Pcl fash ight
talignonents, crop a say but
Inston: sean or fissure inside
the test column, and needa
gs on the eter edges
This consrucion beautify
expresses the principle of
formality anuersored bp
the iegrtion of heces
vith he aypogray ofthe Hook90
VERTICAL ALIGNMENTset 91
Qe eo ery
Oo O°
STACKED CAPITALS
Roman letters are
designed to sit side by
side, not on top of
fone another. Uppercase
Jetters form more stable
stacks than lowercase
letters. Centering the
column helps to even out
the differences in width.
(Iheletter Fis a
perenaial problem)
VERTICAL ALIGNMENT
Vi Vv ae °
Oo OD
e é seat re
= o E
ie iP 70Q ny Ge
i © Saas
= 2
it t Ee a Z
9 ‘ 3 Ons =
i 1 * Sp E
g 6 fit
oO 0 P<
‘Teen crime: SCALA LOWERCASE, VEREICAL BASFLINES
HACKED towencase lop tobetiom. bins 10 top bth aretons
STACKED LOWERCASE VERTICAL waszuiwEs
Stacks of lowercase ‘The simplest way to make a line of
letters are especially text form a vertical line is to change
awkward because the orientation of the baseline from
the ascenders and horizontal to vertical. This preserves
descenders make the the natural affinity among letters sitting,
vertical spacing ona line.
appear uneven, and ‘There is no fixed rule determining
the varied width of whether type should run from top to
the characters makes bottom or from bottom to top. It is more
the stacks look common, however, especially in the
US,, to run text on the spines of books
from top to bottom. {You ean also run
text up and down simultaneously.)
precarious.
English is not Chinese, John Kane, 2002ext | 92
Carrefour de Paralléles —
PuNdyuYydS wi uaja|jeiedand FrenchHIERARCHY Pa
}
HIERARCHY Hierarchy auiaeancatt nenancit }
ree ie a)
nara Reine Face
© chert Chenin Gnd
D, Seraphim ae oe
i 11 Ruling body of clergy Ruling body of clegy RuLive nony or cumnew
Pope oe ie
Hii ‘B. Curdinal Cardinal, Cardinat
i © Archbishop Achbchop seh
\ DDihep Bahop Bitep
1} UI Parts ofa text * Parts of a text PARTS OF ATEXT
| A. Work Work Work
i B Chapter Chapter Cine
i G Secon Sean =
\\ D, Sabton ahaa Sect
HiERARCHY A typographic kierarchy expresses an
organizational system for content, emphasizing
some data and diminishing others. A hierarchy helps
readers scan a text, knowing where to enter and exit
and how to pick and choose among its offerings.
Each level of the hierarchy should be signaled by
‘one or more cues, applied consistently across a body
of text. A cue can be spatial (indent, line spacing,
placement on page) or graphic (size, style, color of
typeface). Infinite variations are possible.
ange
serphin
or cuERcy aciap
work
ants OF dupe
REDUNDANCY Writers are generally trained to
avoid redundancy, as in the expressions “future
plans’ or “past history.” In typography, some
redundancy is acceptable, even recommended, For
‘example, paragraphs are traditionally marked with
a line break ard an indent, a redundancy that has
proven quite practical, as each signal provides
backup for the other. To create an elegant economy
of signals, try using no more than three cues for
each level or break in a document.
CREATING EMPHASIS WITHIN RUNNING TEXT
Emphasizing a word or phrase within a body of text
usually reqttires only one signal. Malic is the standard
form of emphasis, There are many alternatives,
however, including boldface, sMaLL caPs, of a
change in color. You can also create emphasis with a
different font; a full-range type family such as Scala
has many font variations designed to work together.
If you want to mix font families, such as Seala and
Futura, adjust the sizes so that the heights align
' BOLD, ITALIC,
UNDERLINED
CAPS!
TypE cei
Emphasis ca be created
uth just one shiftnext | 95 HIERARCHY
Various forms of dysfinetion appear among populations
‘exposed to typography for long periods of time, Listed here
are a numberof frequenly observed afictions,
syropiitia An excessive attachment to and fascination with
the Shape of eters, offen tothe excision of other interests and
objet chokes Typophilacs usta die penniless and alone.
srvroritonty The firationaldishike of leterforms,ofien marked
by a preference for icons, dingbats, 2nd—in fatal cases—bulles|
and daggers. The feats ofthe typophobe can often be quieted
(bur not cured) by steady doses of Helvetica nd Times Rowan,
mussicerous ryvochtoxnaia A persistent ae that one has sleced the
‘wrong typeface, This condition is often paired with ox (optical
‘emning disorder), the need to constantly adjust and readjust the
paces betwee leer,
ryrornieans “The promiscuous refusal to make a lifelong
Ellen Lupton “Thinking With
Deskin:
le Lupton > “Thrking With Desig’
Terrevent Thing with Goagr
Erase genic deer
ice [Link]/speskuporcives
| Design Writing
Design Culture Now The Nato
| Trent
WER HIERARCHY
Most Web sites ate controlled by hierarchies in an
even more systernatic way than print documents.
A site's file structure proceeds from a root down to
directories holding various levels of content. An
HTML page contains a hierarchy of elements that
can be nested one inside the other. The site’
organization is reflected in its interface—from.
navigation to the formatting of content. Typography
helps clucidate the hierarchies governing all these
features.
Dynamic Web sites use databases to build
pages on the fly as users search for specific content.
Databases cut across the planned hierarchy ofa site,
bringing up links from different levels and content
areas—or from other Web sites. Typographic style
sheets are used to weight the information gathered,
helping users find what they need.
so
|) Book Results joss)
arch
by dtlen Lupton (10 June, 1959)
Skin: Surface, Substance, and Design
By Ellen Lupton, Jennifer Tobias, Aiia Imperiale,
Grace Jeffers, ahd Randi Matas (March, 2002)
jonal Design.
by Donald Albrecht, Elan Luaton, Steven Holt, and
Slaven Slov Holt (L5 March, 2000)
fixing Messages: Graphic Design in
Contemporary Culture
by Elen Lupton (September, 2996)
__ Letters from the Avant-Garde: Modern Graphic /
jesign
by sllen Lupton andi Elaine Lustig Cohen (March.
1995),
ww [Link], Scart engine, 2094
A search engines applies a ypographic hierarchy to
the results calls up, using coor, size, weight, and
cundesining to dijeretiave is pars,WEB ACCESSIBILITY
Many designers are passionately committed to
building accessible sites for the Web. This medium
‘was invented in order to provide universal access
to information, a goal it may some day achieve,
regardless of a user’s physical abilities or access to
specialized software.
cading Style Sheets (CSS) allow designers to
plan alternate layouts depending on the user's
software and hardware, For example, cell phones
and personal digital assistants display Web sites in a
textonly format, while some users have outdated
browsers or lack the software “plug-ins” required
for displaying certain kinds of files. Style sheets can
also be used to design print-friendly versions of
interactive documents
cas
‘Web site, 2001
Designers: Red Canoe
Publisher: Kavanagh
Prodhictons:
This Hasl-enobled ste was
crated for docamentary lm
bout desegregation. 1 includes
«a textbused, HTML version,
desired for users without access
to Mash. The HTML version is
alg easy to print and is use
to journalists or researchers
desiring direct access to the text.text ror WEE ACCESSIBILITY
Visually impaired users employ
automated screen readers that
“linearize” Web pages into a continuous
text that can be read aloud by a
machine. Techniques for achieving
accessibility include the captioning of
all layout tables (or, better yet, the
avoidance of tables altogether), the
consistent use of “alt tags" (which
identify image files), and the placement
of page anchors in front of repeated
navigation clements that enable users |
t0 go directly to the main content.
Various software programs allow
designers to test the linearization of
their pages
Hiscorical Gontext
Oiler
amie
A FORGOTIEN AST
ee eG: Arum ne
‘Web ste, 2003
Designer: Colin Day, Exclamation sera e
Commaniations
Publisher: The Clapham Institute
Thissie was designed to he acess to toate
sighed anil nonsighed users, Av righe is MSY
Aven veion of he page above, rere
One of the defining principles of the Web is that it should provide all
people, regardless of physical or technological readiness, with access
toinformation. Patrick Lynch and Sarah Horton, 2001PARAGRAPH EXERCISE
raraGrariis do not occur in nature. Whereas
sentences are grammatical elements intrinsic
to the spoken language, paragraphs are a wholly
literary convention designed to divide content
into portions that are more appetizing to readers
(and waiters) than an endless stream of
discourse. In the seventeenth century, it became
standard to mark the beginning of a new
paragraph with an indent, and to mark its close
with a Tine break, Before then, typographers
sometimes left extra space between paragraphs
or sentences (without a line break}, preserving
the clean edges of the text block, Despite the
ubiquity of the indentjline brealt convention
today, numerous alternatives can be used in its
place, Inventing new ones is an intriguing
typographic exercise.
‘This exercise indebted to Geonge Sade and
‘Wiliam, Bevington at the Cooper Union
arte hrs ofthe nya wi thal bg yuri it
comyng shal neuer ende ne Saati And to thi ign
repeal oat f
thes wey aad how brett tere bediicomyngera ou
{ord yer hethtcheanaeehencionnexpeia buco
thotlleeasofthathecameinfmayne oats eothewod
tolls comch tegen dome egpet
Sia: of te ce of re Cae
ee Let ae ye ta of gadaes ace iges
eee fe “athe
coma ouiincumaetanatan ey
"Aad by cause ofthe comyng at the
ies ios Arr
Page desl, 1892
Designet: William Morris
Publisher: Kelmscott Press
Willian Morris admire the
dense pages of the early
Renaissance, Here, he has sed
8 paragraph spol in place
of tine breaks and indents
The table i covered ith a tablecloth which isl
protected by 2 plastic tablecloth. Drapes and double drapes
ate atthe windows. We have carpets, slipcovers, coasters,
wainscoting, lampshades. Each trinket sits on a dois, eal
ower in its po, and each pot in its sacer
Eremthing is protected and surrounded, Even in the
garden, each chistes encircled with wiee neting each path
is outlined by bricks, mosaics, a fagstones.
This could be analyzed 26 an sions sequestration, 3s
an obsessional symbatsn: the obsession ofthe cottage ovnes
ann sal capitalist not only to possess, but to underline what
he possesses two of three Himes, There, as ether places, the
notations and overworking,
— Jeon tadrlrd,1960
The table i covered with table cloth whieh itselF is protected
by a plate lable cloth, Drapes and double drapes are atthe
windows, We have carpets, slipcaress, coasters, wainscoting,
Jampslades. Bac trinket sits ox a doy eel lower in its
poland each pot its sae:
renting iv protected and surrounded, Even i the garden,
ch eso is encircled with wite meting, eal path is out
[Link] bricks, mosaics, oF fagstones.
This could be analyzed as ait ansious sequestration, as an
‘obsessional syenbolism: the olisession ofthe cottage owner
and small capitalist not only 19 porses, bul te undedine
‘wat he possesses to or tse ites, There as other pees
the unconscious speaks in the redundancy of sigs. their
connotations and averworking,
= Jeo Banbilrd, 1969‘The able is covered with tablecloth which selfs protected
bya plastic tablecloth, Drapes aud double deapes are a the
‘windows. We havo carpet, slipcovers, coasters, wainscoling,
lampshades. Each trinket sits oa del, eae Hower in ts po,
sand each points saucer,
erthing is proce and surrounded, Even in the garden,
tach duster fs enctled wih wire meting, each path is out
lined by brik, mosaics, or agstones.
‘his could be analyzed as an anvious sequestration, as an ab-
sessional symbols: th obsession ofthe cottage ewer and
ull capitalist not only, 0 possess, but 19 undedine what he
possesses two or three tines There, as other places, the
unconscious speak in the redundaney of signs, in thee con
rion al overwork.
— een Badrilan, 136
Thetable is coveted wth table cath which isl protected
bya plastic table oth. Drapes and double drapes are atthe
vvindows. We have eepes, slipcovers, coasters, wainscoing,
Jamnpshades. Eich trinket sits ona diy each flamer in is pat,
aa ech pti its sauces
“Behing is potected and surrounded,
ach ster isencteled ith wire netting, cach path is out
ye in the garde,
lined by bricks, mosses r agstones.
This could be analyze as an ansous sequestration, a5 an
‘hsssionalsyrbelism: the obsession of the ctiage owner
and smal eapalist not only to possess, But to undedtine what
he possesses tao othr times. Ther, as ater places, the
‘unconscious speaks inthe redundancy of signs, in thei con:
tations and ovecworking
— jen Barat, 1969,
LENE BREAK AND 1/2 LINE SPACE
PARAGRAPHS
“The ables covered wih a table cl which iselF 6 protected
bya plastic tle cloth, Drapes anu! double drapes are at the
windows. We have carpets, slipewers,ceasters, wainscoting
lampshades, Esch trinket sits on adil, ech Rlawer ints pot,
ancl each pot in its sauces. Everying is protected and sur
rounded. Even in the garden, each cluster is encircled with
wire meting, each path #9 ontlined by bricks, mosaics, or
Aagstoues, This eould be analyzed as an anwious sequesta
tion, a an obsessional symbolises the obsession af the cotage
owner and small eapitalise no ony to possess, but to underline
what le possesses tho oF tec times. Thee, ae ater places,
the unconscious spealss in the redundancy of signs in theie
connotations and overworking,
Jean Baird, 1969
“he able s covered with table cloth which self prolected
by plastic table cloth. Drapes and double drapes are at the
‘windows, We hive carpets slipcovers, coasters, wainscoting
lampshades. Fach tinket sis en a del, each Hower i its pol,
and each pot i its saueet i Tventhing i potsctd and sie
rounded, Zven in the garden, each dlusice is enctcled with,
wire netting, each pati is eullined by bricks, mosses, or
fagsones. This could bo analyzed 38 an anxious ssquestea
tion, 26 an obsessional symbolism: the oiession of the cot
tage owner and small capitalist not ony to possess, bu
underline what he possesses two or thee tines. There, as
other places the unconscious speaks i the redundancy of
signs, in their connotations and overworking,
— Jan Baudritart, 1969
‘The first word of the first line is the critical word of that particular body of text.
lett start flush, atleast. WA. Dwiggins} WORD EXERCISE next | 104
‘You can express the meaning ofa word
oran idea through the spacing,
of letters on the page.
Designers often think this way when
sizi
creating logotypes, posters, or editorial
/
| and place
i
headlines. In this project, physical
sition transiti
processes such as disruption,
and migration are expressed through
i ener eer eerten ee
“The round Os in Futura make ita fun
typeface to use for this project
Examples of student wort from
1 Maryan Insitute Cllege of Art
i, ‘ , ‘
dis‘uption © © mpression€ yexpansion |
satan WILLIAM
WORD EXERCISE
jon
t
iS,
migration
elimina jon
ao
4
fos
,
‘TEXT EXERCISE
Use modes of alignment (flush left, Qush
right, justified, and centered) to actively
interpret a passage of text. The passage
here, from Walter Ong’s book Orality and
Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word,
explains how the invention of printing,
with movable type imposed a new spatial
order on the written word, in contrast
with the moze organic pages of the manu-
script era, Each project comments on the
conflicts between hard and soft, industrial
and natural, planning and randomness,
that undeslie all typographic composition.
Examples of student work fom
‘Marya Institute Collegeof Art
in ie
ol pil mp on by
ee ean ie
fl on ech
ering emo om ee vu:
ba ri ce woe
she si ofits or ee
Passages of flush eft ond lus igh text hinge frome central axis
jonwsciix KUDOS
ondomly spaced words break fe fv a rigidly justified column.
Inhinderng cel pt
Trae
rol koe
ll er
long, centered lies are bridges between narrow, ragged columns
NENTAMIN LUTZlon ton wing ee did Wing
ro wa fi he wand wd
ld fal se Bot pit ek
sere err in chi ee Ceo
of psn beeing in, cd
Pee cesta thee
oF pe de
cies deel
fi ele al al the
eat, gor cating onc
ere Ties Ginsu fot
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ies ods
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Se
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ist ea al jel
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ite edie
Site onto of
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This an oben word of
‘sine se
ements beak asp from a fustified column,
TEXT EXERCISE
ine senwonh ingen mae yt weg
ng os words cr nun wold wd of
inl pe bt pit ack polo pnb pce.
Coal ee tela dy at Is adi
= esl ea leap
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ee se retro cx tasin esi winea Geel
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Senihing in iad,
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ee tpi
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‘Text i forced into a grid of ragged squaresext | ro8109
Second Skin
NANCY DALVA DISSECTS
GEOTEREY BEENE
Magazine, 1995
Designee: Abbott Miller
Photoprapher: Jack Deutsch
Publisher: Patsy "Tarr
Like diagram from ar
anatomy Book, the typograpy
maps the Boy sen throug
tie skin of the page.= = = == atasom =
! Concept for Web site
Design: 2x4, New Yorkook, 4725 printed by
Nigolas Jenson, Venice
allection ofthe Walters Art
Museum, Baltimore
During the frst century of
printing the Frenchoborn
printer Niolas Jenson
tstablshod a printing business
in Vince, a ivi commercial
center, This book: rates an
clean, unbroken text blk set
in one of the fst roman
‘ypc. The page has no Une
breaks or bade.
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Recetas ert Rar cae ae
noeGRID
A GRID DREAKS SPACE OR TIME INTO REGULAR UNITS. A grid can be
simple or complex, specific or generic, tightly defined or loosely interpreted.
‘Typographic grids are all about control. They establish a system for
arranging content within the space of page, screen, or built environment.
Designed in response to the internal pressures of content {text, image, data) |
and the outer edge or frame (page, screen, window), an effective grid is not
a rigid formula but a flexible and resilient structure, a skeleton that moves
in concert with the muscular mass of information.
Grids belong to the technological framework of typography, fom
the concrete modularity of letterpress to the ubiquitous rulers, guides, and
coordinate systems of graphics applications. Although software generates |
illusions of smooth curves and continuous tones, every digital image or |
mark is constructed—ultimately—ftom a grid of neatly bounded blocks. The
ubiquitous language of the Gut (graphical user interface] creates a gridded
space ini which windows overlay windows in a haphazard way {
In addition to their place in the background of design production,
grids have become explicit theoretical tools, Avant-garde designers in the
1gr08 and 1920s exposed the mechanical grid of letterpress, bringing it to }
the polemical surface of the page. ln Switzerland after World War Il, graphic
designers built a total design methodology around the typographic grid,
hoping to construct with it a new and rational social order,
‘The grid has evolved across centuries of typographic development.
For graphic designers, grids are carefully honed intellectual devices, infused
with ideology and ambition, and they are the inescapable mesh that filers,
at some level of res
lution, nearly every system of writing and reproduction.ate ores tae Be
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LATIN minne (Her)
Book page, 1497
Printed by
Anton Koberper
A tomcat grid engulf
second st of colar
ach age i a dense mass
inci with narrow autre
‘andl open spaces where
iuminated capitals would
rave bev ald by hand
‘The layout chang fons
age to page<< ll s—“
enn [as
GRID AS FRAME
Alphabetic writing, like most writing systems, is organized into columns
and rows of characters. Whereas handwriting flows into connected lines,
the mechanics of metal type impose a stricter order. Each letter occupies its
own block, and the letters congregate in orderly rectangles. Stored in
gridded cases, the characters become an archive of elements, a matrix of
existing forms from which each page is composed.
Until the twentieth century, grids served as frames for fields of text.
The margins of a classical book page create a pristine barrier around a flush,
solid block of text. A page dominated by a solitary field of type remains
today’s most common book format, although that perfect rectangle is now
“broken with indents and line breaks, and the margins are peppered with
page numbers and running heads (text indicating the book or chapter title)
In addition to the classical norm of the single-column page, various
alternative layouts existed during the first centuries of printing, from the
rid of Gutenberg’s Bible to more elaborate layouts derived
bwo-column
from the medieval scribal tradition, where passages of scripture aze
surrounded by scholarly commentary, Polyglot (multilingual) books display
a text in several languages simultaneously, demanding complex divisions
of the surfice.
Such formats permit multiple streams of text to coexist while
defending the sovereignty of the page-as-frame. The philosopher Jacques
Derrida has described the frame in Western art as a form that seems to be
separate from the work yet is necessary for marking its difference from
everyday life. A frame or pedestal elevates the work, removing it from the
realm of the ordinary. The work thus depends on the frame for its status
and visibility
Typography is, by and large, an att of framing, a form designed to
melt away as it yields itself to content. Designers focus much of their energy
‘on margins, edges, and empty spaces, elements that oscillate between
present and absent, visible and invisible. With print’s ascent, margins
became the user interface of the book, providing space for page numbers,
running heads, commentary, notes, and ornaments.
The frame... disappears, buries itself, effaces itself, melts away at the moment it deploys its
greatest energy. The frame is in no way a background... but neither is its thickness as margin
a figure. Or at least it is a figure that comes away of its own accord. Jacques Derrid:imnayinananat}
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SEIT 1721 ZzClasses of Swiss design
‘hoor include Jose Mer
Brockinann, Grid Systems in
(Grape Design (Switzerland:
Ram Publications, 1996
first published in 196) and
The Graphic Arist aa his
Design Problems (Switeeeand:
Authur Niggli Li, 1964);
and Karl Gerstner Disiging
Programmes (Suitzertane
Anhut Niggli, 1964), See also
Emil Ruder, Typography (Ney
York: Hastings House, 1981
Fst published in 1963)
GRID AS PROGRAM
During the post-World War IT period, graphic designers in Switzerland
honed ideas from the New Typography into a total design methodology.
It was at this time that the term “grid” (raster) became commonly applied
to page layout. Max Bill, Karl Gerstner, Josef Miiller-Brockmann, Emil
Ruder, and others were practitioners and theorists of a new rationalism
that aimed to catalyze an honest and democratic society, Rejecting the
artistic clichés of self expression and raw intuition, they aspired to what
Rader called “a cool and fascinating beauty.”
Karl Gerstner's book Designing Programmes (1964) is a manifesto
for systems-oriented design. Gerstner defined a design “programme”
as a set of rules for constructing a range of visual solutions, Connecting his
methodology with the new field of computer programming, Gerstner
presented examples of computer-generated patterns that were made by
mathematically describing visual elements and combining them according
to simple rules.
Expanding on the pioneering ideas of Bayer, Tschichold, Renner,
and other designers of the avant garde, the Swiss rationalists rejected the
centuries-old model of the page-as-frame in favor ofa continuous
architectural space. Whereas a traditional book would have placed captions,
commentary, and folios within a protective margin, the rationalist grid cut
the page into multiple columns, each bearing equal weight within the
whole, suggesting an indefinite progression outward. Pictures were cropped
to fit the modules of the grid, yielding shapes of unusual proportion.
Constructing ever more elaborate grids, the Swiss designers used the
confines of a repeated structure to generate variation and surprise, Such
grids could be activated in numerous wayS within a single publication,
always referring back to the root structure.
This approach, which quickly became known as “Swiss design,”
found adherents (and detractors) around the world. Many American
designers dismissed Swiss rationalism as irrelevant to a society driven. by
pop culture and hungry for rapidly transforming styles. Programmatic
thinking is now being revived, however, as designers today confront large-
scale information projects. The need is greater than ever for flexible
“programs” accommodating dynamic bodies of content.
The typographic grid is a proportional regulator for composition, tables, pictures, etc....
‘The difficulty is; to find the balance, the maximum of conformity to a rule with the maximum.
of freedom. Or: the maximum of constants with the greatest possible variability.IE NEUE ARCHITERTIR)
Book, 1940
Max Bill
‘Author: Max Roth
Photograpi: Dan Meyers 4 ging the original
or ces Bil a3“
‘pegrephica sreture of the biup raf
«ccTaReRaeT| ne q
I GRID AS TABLE
ists of cousarst oF uxxow (2ELOW)
Interactive information
Tables and graphs are a variant of the typographic grid. A table cons
vertical columns and horizontal rows, each cell occupied by data. A graph is
a line mapped along the x and y axes of a grid, each dimension representing nn ee yf
avariable (such as time and stock value, shown below). As explained by “The New York Tienes
Edward Tufte, the leading critic and theorist of information design, tables Ths omne data grup ins
i and graphs allow relationships among numbers to be perceived and rapidly aes ie id ae 2
compated by the eye. In tables and graphs, the grid is a cognitive tool. Eee Coronas
H ‘Tables are a central aspect of Web design. The table feature was graph ofthe company’s sock
i incorporated into Hatt code in 1995 so that Web authors could present a eT
tabular data, Graphic designers, eager to give shape to the Web's wide and inter upg, desring
| flacid text bodies, quickly devised unauthorized uses for the rmx table, dn een that zur a that
transforming this tool for representing data into nothing more nor less than. Foresample, in Other
| i a typographic grid. Designers have used the table feature to control the ga ieee,
placement of images and captions and to build margins, gutters, and fds as the company’s stock
multicolumn screens. Designers also use tables to combine multiple styles ws plummeting
| of alignment—such as flush left and flush right—within a document, and
| to construct elegantly numbered and bulleted lists.
PUBLIC INFORMATION INSIDE ENRON
se0a
Daly ein price oct. a7
of Eton Sock
Enean reduces the estets on ts belance sheet by $1.01 bilo to
Correct an accounting error invalvang the Restor partnerships,
‘The compary freezes the assels nits 401(4) refrement pan to
low for aciinistrave changes.
‘Sources: Bloorisera Financiol Markets The New York Times
[uan-coni[ FEB. [MARCH | APRIL [WAY [SNE [ WLY [AUG | SEPT. | OGT, | NOV.
a a aOn the aesthetics and ethics
of information design, soe
Edward Tile, Envisioning
nfrmation (Cheshire, Cons,
Graphics Press, 1990),
On designing accessible Web
sits, see Patrick Lynch and
Sucal Horton, Web Si
Design Principles
Web Sites (New
Web site, 2004
Designers: Carton Denofeio
Partners
Publisher Maryland Institute
Colicge of Art
FHITME tales, wit hele honors
erly expesed are an element
this nel gridded Wes page,
By creating cells that span raultiple columns and rows, designers
build layout structures that bear little relation to the logically ordered fields
ofa data chart. A master table typically establishes areas for navigation,
content, and site identity, and each region contains a smaller table—or
tables—inside itself. Grids propagate inside of grids,
him purists reject such workarounds as spurious, even unethical,
design tactics. Visually driven, illogical layout tables can cause problems for
sightimpaired users, who implement various devices to translate digital
pages into sound, cell by cell, row by row. Assistive screen readers
“linearize” digital text into a stream of spoken words. Accessibility experts
encourage Web designers to “think in linear terms” wherever possible, and
to make sure their tables make sense when read in a continuous sequence.
Accessible Web sites also consider the needs of users working with older
software or text-only browsers, Linear thinking helps net only non-sighted
audiences but also the users of cell phones, hand-held digital appliances,
and other devices where space is tight and text is dominant.BEYOND HTML
rari, the technology that allowed the Intemet to become a global mass.
medium, is the virtual counterpart to letterpress, which mechanized the
production of the book and cleared the ground for a world culture of print.
Like letterpress, rn is a text-hungry medium that can be coaxed, with
some resistance, to display images, It is fiandamentally driven by text, from
its open, readable source code to the type of content it is designed to display
rrr coexists with other languages on the Web, just as alternative
technologies appeared alongside letterpress, Lithography, invented for the
ighteenth century, quickly became an
manufacture of images in the
advertising medium that incorporated words as well as pictures, just as
letterpress made space in its mechanical grid for woodcuts, engravings, and
photographic halfione blocs. In the twentieth century lithography replaced
letterpress as the world’s dominant printing method; used with digital or
photographic typesetting, it conveys text and pictures with equal comfort
Lithography is not governed by grids as relentlessly as letterpress;
neither is Macromedia Flash, the animation software that became a
common Web-design tool. Flash was originally designed for the creation of
Although its primary purpose was pictorial, it is now
vector-based cartoons
used to construct the interface and content, both graphic and textual, of
entire Web sites
Although Flash scripting manipulates objects in a field of x and y
coordinates, the sites created with this technology often appeat less tightly
controlled by grids than the tabulated pages of srt, The Flash sites that
became, in the late 1990s, icons of a new Web aesthetic are more cinematic
than typographic, and often feature a painterly mix of word and image.
emp | 132
sansparent gil
Handcoting HITME fas
slow and deliberate as sting
‘metal type, Enspy able ells
tre usr to ou! aren of open
space, hal HTM, makes,
these callape ike alls an
tray py, easing the grad
to implode, The transparent
mags tka often fil thes
spaces ore virtual equivalents
tothe bark spacing material
of etal ype
Wels pe (eral)
Designers: Thomas Remer,
Jason Hillyer, Charles
Michelet, Robert Reed,
and Matthew Richmond,
The Chopping Block
This Web site reprise
he design
fea bwentith century fat
rae tabs, whic were
produced as ithographic prin
‘hat merge text ar image
The Web page is animate,
Foading elements overtimecup [134
WILITAM GinsON's 1984 NOVEL Newromancer envisions cyberspace as a
vast ethereal grid. Gibson's data cowboy leaves behind the “meat” of his
body and drifis off into a “transparent 3p chessboard extending to infinity.”
The image of this grid is projected on an internal surface of the mind,
bound by no screen or window.
“The grid as infinite space—defying edges and dominated by mind
rather than body— sstrument within modernist theory, where
it isa form both rational and sublime. In the early twentieth century, avant-
garde designers exposed the grid in order to dramatize the mechanical
conditions of prigt. After World War II, Swiss designers built a total design
methodology around the grid, infusing it with ideological intention, ‘The grid
the postmodern turn toward
s a powerful
was their key to a universal language. Wi
historical, vernacular, and popular sources in the 1970s and 1980s, many
designers rejected the rationalist grid as a quaint artifact of Switzerland's
own orderly society.
The rise of the Internet has rekindled interest in universal design ‘On the invention af the
thinking. The Web was invented in the early 1990s (in Switzerland) to let ‘Why ave Tien Bereeea es
scientists and researchers share documents created with different software jicmw"Sytigs stop) tra
applications, Its inventor, Tim Berners-Lee, never guessed it would become a coujemiporary account of
design-driven medium connecting vast numbers of differently abled and universal design thinking
divergently motivated people around the globe. wee a
Universal design systems can no longer be dismissed as the [Undverel Principles of Design
irrelevant musings of a small, localized design community. A second (Gloucester, Mase: Rockport
modernism has emerged, reinvigorating the utopian search for universal Piero ae
forms that marked the birth of design as a discourse and a discipline nearly (jew Yorke Ace Book 1584)
a century earlier. Against the opacity and singularity of unique Visual
expressions—grounded in regional preferences and private obsessions—
ideas of commonality, transparency, and openness are being reborn as
information seeks to shed its physical body.
‘To produce designs that are objectively informative is primarily
asocio-cultural task. Josef Miiller-Brockmann, 19613S
eet nsc
Pera
oreo
La
ever ta
end
fee ener ;
Web site, 2004
Designed by
The anonymous coolness of
ol Swiss ratfonation
in Web design, as seen
in the use of flush lp, lowercase
Hebetica ai consistent gr
Hak gar Soshun Davi, wh
designs seveme sere layouts with
Scripted anination, i leader
of mid-century graphics, now
inflected ith£ Jnana
e eur ree suweri sss
tnanpranateshn an
sade te nr dr Sat a
‘rts ar anita oiunor omar
mrt] Oa staish dean se
fut ch haar
“Feige enc
aes a |
Journal
Designers: Cyan, Bertin
Ihe the pages of tis
wae ree ‘experimental jours, compact
| Reppert a wemine
ao oe paseo meri
Wee pv wr dleaes tran unin, By marking paragrapis with
symbols rather thee dents ond
Tine breaks, the designers hase
maximized the density of the
eee sex fi. Rung heats, page
‘streets a en suurbers and images are
rr snes ut te asd
tral of ext, Fatale are aso
treated s jst Hk,
ured go deres against the |
arin of he pugeGOLDEN SECTION
No book about typography would be
complete without.a discussion of the golden
section, a ratio (relationship between two
numbers) that has been used in Western art
and architecture for more than two thousand
years. The formula for the golden section is
arb=D: (axb).
‘This means that the smaller of two elements
(such as the side of a rectangle) relates to
the larger element in the same way that that
the larger element relates to the two pacts
combined, In other words, side a is to side
bas side b is to the sum of both sides.
Expressed numerically, the golden section is,
1.618
enn [338
The glen sevion, which
appears in nae aswell as in
art and design. as many
suprising properties. For
example, whe you remove &
square fre a gaen
rectangle, the remainder is
smother golden rectangle,
process that cas be infitly
repeated 0 create a spiral
Some graphic designers are fascinated with
the golden section and use it to create various grids
and page formats—indeed, entire books have been
ten on the subject. Other designers believe that
the golden section is no more valid as a basis for
deriving sizes and proportions than other methods,
such as beginning from standard industrial paper
sizes, or dividing suzfaces into halves or squat
simply picking whole-number page formats and
making logical divisions within them.
OFono | 39 GOLDEN SECTION
Golden rectonge of text on Golden rectangle of text on
85x tvinch page (US. sandand) ‘Ag page (European standard, 210 %-297 mm)
Commercial printers generally
prefer to work with pes immed
fo em measures rats than wit
lobo navigation
obue ractons. Howe,
yo can float golden rectangles
twit page of any nin
salbcamtent
Fora more deed account of fain =)
design and the golden seaion, content tines
see Kirabely Elam, Geamury
of Dain (New York Princeton
Arehitoctual Bess, 2001)
For un emphasis ox applying the
olden section to sypoarapiy
fee John Kane, A Tipe rier
ond: Lautence King, 2003)
It may wel be absunt Yo hase «| Website on he golden section,
but here, nonetheless, isu desig for ene, This wie frame diagram
describes a Web page tat is 500 x Soo plats. The yalden screen
Is then divided with squares and golden rectangleSINGLE-COLUMN GRID
Se
emp | 140
This standard, 85 anh page has even margins
af he way around, It se ghlyeconomiei, but
ind very intersting, desig.
Every time you open 2 new document in Quark
XPress or Adobe InDesign, you are prompted
to create a grid. (Microsoft Word, on the other
hand, doese’t ask; it just makes a grid for you)
‘The simplest grid consists of a single column
of text surounded by margins.
By asking for page dimensions and margin
widths from the outset, layout programs
encourage you to design your page from the
ide fn, (The text column is the space left
outs
cover when the margins have been subtracted.)
his page som inch shorter than « snarl
US office sheet The text back isa square, eaing
margins of varying ize
Alternatively, you can design your page
from the inside out, by setting your margins
to zero and then positioning guidelines and
text boxes on a blank page. This allows you
to experiment with the margins and colunns.
rather than making a commitment as soon
as you open a new document. You can add
guidelines to a master page after they meet
faction,SINGLE-COLUMN GRID
In this symmetrical double-page spread, the inside
margins are wider than th margins
reming moze open space atthe spine of te
Books and magazines should be designed
as spreads (facing pages}. ‘The bwo-page
spread, rather than the individual pag,
the main unit of design, Left and right
margins become inside and outside
margins, Page layout programs assume that
the inside margins are the same on both
the left-and right-hand pages, yielding a
symmetrical, mirror-image spread. You are
free, however, to set your own margins and
create an asymmetrical spread.
In this asymmetrical layout, hel
aloays wider aan the rit muargi,
‘appear along dhe inside or ose eg of te pag(-MULTI-COLUMN GRID
=a “cree
There are numerous ways t0 use a basic cole
‘ri, Here, one clam has been reserved for
Inmages and captions, andthe others or txt
While single-columm grids work well for
simple documents, multiscolumn grids
provide flexible formats for publications that
have a complex hiearchy or that integrate text
and illustrations. The more columns you
cxeate, the more flexible your grid becomes,
You can use the grid to articulate the hierarchy
of the publication by creating zones for
different kinds of content. A text or image can
‘occupy a single column or it can span several.
Not all the space has to be filled.
enn | 14a)
TSE
In this variation, image and tet share
cal space
[arene lements
of varying
al
|
the gidcomp | 143
ol band vies a tess
lems
which provides am internal structure forthe page
In addition to creating vertical zones with
the columns of the grid, you can also divide
the page horizontally. Por example, an area
across the top can be reserved for images and
captions, and body text can “hang” from
common line, In architecture, a horizontal
reference point like this is called a datwn.
Columns of test hang from a date,
{allng downers with a rnewon rag
‘70s the bottom,
(MULTI-COLUMN GRIDHang Loisalpa
hss)
Vatoerduorsit
Dhuchteetihat
fs. wn
ohh:
2.598;afm
Wasea rau
otsont
Masse 80.26
Getrste Sin
Piston: Stren
Ba.a7und tem
Tolerant ne
Boon: 12-90 om
Lngenctie 320m
er 6.000
Figenbrete:
‘und verdichtet, wie dies im Betonbau ablich ist. Da der Beton,
bbei diesem Vorgang die Vor- und Rucksprange der Rackseite
der Steinplattenwand umfliesst, entstand eine vorzugliche
Verzahnung und Verbindung der beiden Materialien Kunststein
(Beton) und Naturstein.
‘Allerdingskonnten die Wande nichtin ihrer ganzen Hohe
auf einmal hintergossen werden. Das musste in Hohenetappen
von [Link] erfolgen. Erst wenn der Beton einer Lage eine bestinn-
te Festigkeit erreicht und sich mit dem Mauerwerk verbunden
hatte, konnte die nchste Lage von 50m dariber betoniert
‘werden, Eine hdhere Schdttmasse von fldssigem Beton hatte
die freistehenden Steinplattenwande seitlich weggedrackt
Insgesamt wurden for die Wande der Therme ago nv oder
1300 Tonnen Valser Quarzitpiattenu 3100 n° Wandflache in
20 Schichten prom’ verarbeitet. Die Lange aller verwendeten
Plattenstreifen zusammen ergibt ein Total von 62.000 Laut-
metern, was der Strecks von Vals nach Haldenstein entspricht.
Patar Zumthor
aden
Dyeiten der
figinen:8-noom
{ingen bis329"% Euieiander=
Je Plaza Beschicha Grosse
Soran inor i. slwaeg-10"
Stirkevon em uct
bern: jebrochener
pol, por. Stem rian
bestock 9 Schwiteaen
ctifenination slngelibter und
Meglieneeten —geteigt|mininala pacer tan
UndeinerFugen-Tolararuen (wet Staniss!
brekeventimn —untersia Nr) prosstomatige
‘espallene Platten
bien ame
Plate
mim leranzBooklet, 2003
net: Clemens ScheileBéla BartokThe Beatles
folate cot deep ach romp
lin eytheeoce oe Dales crete ln iit eben
‘fe hswonnclng ok ines arene Spe
‘Abt toesccbortked lr hese ine
Catilegue, 2003
Designer: Hans Dieter Reichert
Publisher Phaidon
Photograph: Dan Meyers
This catalogue fora book
publisher posites «rational and
sian eucre foraging
rund of dire boos, ene
oe presented a pilot
annotated with decurenary dat
The margin as. navigation
Snterfare forthe catalog
Divisions cca otk horizontally
and verticallycen [248
~__Blay serves leaming though exoerimentation withol
risk. Learaing occurs through quick, imprecise actions, conducleg
within understood rules of a game, and tree from threat or consurt
mation. Play does not use up so much as build,
ilar yndst! ctl of computing. 70
Inport wy op
Pay akos many fens, Fresmple ean
Init oreo Accodngtooneclosse
rr a a a oT an
lon crete of mlorapporstus and erptimerta
Un it iba! pers. Tis mental play
Incas aarose ollie on a wi.
‘enon py neues ot of merry inagatn
fees and assent lhe Fad, stil ply
Incest an ary ining and catch,
Iain and atv eakrg state play ele:
Inoveme nts err berate cents ard
trl ol inner slates.
‘Cnt andere ning embrace guage
of tas ply tos Aguayo prective
Press combines ary sa el, Ses hile
fran atest nee mer lal rs be
Blanced ard hehe bas cf a etelion
Cat oaming ie aformel ial soe thn
Hun norte piel hls up ec,
“nhotery ermrstatien arena ng, Dam ca
lesa compenert ha ation aye unde
Seon te ll sisperstn of sta et alos
parlopaton nat astoe meds Connections
‘roth tacts They te laste ply hei
rorples Ue opralina lamig. all he innet
Sih se pation rete a0 er tat
tinge tha mtn
Ply saa ereng though experimentation
thou i ly ote nek ny ei
fue aim otar than the purl of mito, bt
neon sma ntti fo serve th proces of
Maveeperent Leaming occ vag ae, ire
‘ea atone, census whim understate of»
tame, ne ro heat or eansurton, Pay
Alonsret ise psp men nb Ore hing
TEE PEC
lds sem sese. Plays cris
es of wea, xogGeael ales ek
the apuroiate ara fr llr development
“Thre ic mt fo be ad for py naa
lia madiom ie dtine byte atorsnces usc
‘ins, he ering carats ol epi ee
Dowels. Expetimertation espe ve
cern lat wheats wo aunt
Instat, We mist eco tht begin wre
ew rh i lof alk Thai
Te Toa ices, Rewever aia
stordaneen Deg enol any nartion 9
nat to neces an ea
Erie of ec oF of nappn payee
fT crane ust a el aa
hot the ats ar ont eae at le
fat
Ot course whan came ocr
sit mut leurs Ina san eal cha
er ett nom An of nie, te mart
perl ae often ite yourn Beal
het this pont da aah oem
‘nor should be early tape ler tae
Shapes te mind ntl sacar saga alae
hd solinare daa tices lord werk and hy
‘Structure and improvisation
The masiorat pay mpragces Canes ne st
Dab In Nays of te Mad— Tho Oren
Imprnged Candoct 78th muscle Dvd
Shor ae ue oro scaripon af ase at
rowioeg inate. imposing ona pecs
‘much mor let thar sep paying Fone ale
{anor by ota, Stn npn Maran,
Imps bagi with sane of suc to
“ahs eis eqn nap For wal
ry 1a an ange small ape Te
itvluect th yoo reser apis od
‘chord. hich may be medi n canes
piyeal mes! One eld lay the sac
‘xtmbe or ane oul arate ary aby
“al One ould waraposs ar vet Orece ca
Theoret thi he nos replayed heFagot lack sod daca OF cous oe cols
date donient mse en mins chore
Sueno hat boo Ua aatlens
tet caso pha psn. they are ead
iets sls oibrgu oeassay lobe uorenas
laren ne ach tecoes ahaa Tht he
Fis el ol avaration en actor ee
EBbyeczrvdtendereles 1 sot ilo pial,
Fegerees th cata ger on cata haya The
Iwas ow yt hand, ad he ed ay
Bitte syn Th ay rey the tur rte by
Fe seich oul require coeceusatartion-—
feycanes ine en vot lente elect
Beever ie trl teers ol heh
Patio el even nw ero url eee
Tee Thusereepsfllentepetove one
Inne te owen nary enares has
Jote sh The ans envenes eo r fo
ts, th roams aes ttl to
ra wove bear Oe
{i evel rli othe rece a
Sth td slow anh net wp then
bi ck ard ner at soy wet
Olesen are cme tae ae gh
{hese ies a th te dole back
‘om as ga at vera hs
‘There yer nine weton pai
oven at rut fhe way wd cone
sponding lous exiutypraices mys
ftiehand wo cite twee ells
the petaranes of uch mane
“ransos en sucha inten see
‘nen ard crete ah spac
Dilth teat slong te ala don
ois nove conga oe tot
Df tetoran by earl ea agai
‘ans arts otensieand eas.
Atte ae theca a thy lene
Inpro pga les any cnchpseny
preties rain ary vad csr oa ese
Sats uch ego stan ets
fie foe ables nso much nea tie
fonds lal iin pel tepnae estan
For exon of natal Sage Hobe Reds
faite atples sles moe es tn Move
Shioranedy gta neces made
Sieur nae
tral ns sha clei
ray st ennanonty le Crh Hoos
canine ows tie negli ted
ox ovals, rar tan ch acher
nce fh sn the pean a a or
Psst nts Heed Ronse at
Dibeuttltsen te die snr natealea
te rr fegrnon" Noa ta he
vesthaesen soni seh i
Canna Inecaee of rcs ail po
‘aya Te rey of str mage ee
i rw esireal adi Gomes aoe
‘tie sicre ntl oon oman
Dit rf oprin, Th cepen
Iisrectiesthe arp pbs oises nub
The natural tendency of the hand is net to repeat itse
@ven in a series of figural repetitions. Thus once a sufficient seper-
toire of ruins is learned, this tendency inherently ensures a richness
fothe sound. Tie hand searches its teritary for sequences, wnich
pfocess replaces a faithfulness to the score, and that makes jazz.
ce eareaaias
eprUEN mia:
Book. 1999)
Designers: Mesis and
Van Dewesen
Biot: an Abrams
Publisher: Netherlands
Design Institute
Photograph: Dan Meyers
In thi bon about new media,
«nooo grid contains the
mal ody of text. The pall
ote, ranng across (00
seis, are fraed thinly
rule bases that suggest the
cveropping “windows” on
computer screen. The top
ear, which rnb th
tool dar i browser, pris
sam interface tothe BokMODULAR GRID
cmp | 150
Ged diagram, 1963 (redrawn)
Designer: Karl Gerstner
Anlur Nigh, Zusich
“This square gid consis ofsie vercal
olwnns an six: horizon sodas,
overlayed by grids of one, Iwo, the
‘red four units.
Vertically the god is governed
bya so-point measure, which
ing of
‘ype fom: baseline 1 baseline
wot deere the sp—— t~S
Geup | 152 MODULAR GRID
hie mex gri iu
1 columns and four ros Endless variations are posible
Are imag oF text block ar occupy oe oF mov
mod
‘A modular grid has consistent horizontal
divisions from top to bottom, in addition to
snt, These
modules govern the placement and cropping
of pictures as well as text. In the 1950s and
1960s, Swiss graphic designers including
Karl Gerstner, Emil Ruder, and Josef Maller-
Brockmann devised modular grid systems
Jike the one shown here.
[cet systems ||
vertical divisions from left to r
nia i
ions by tay
mg the lef ede of the pug
ruler, postion guidelines comresponding
tothe line spacing leading) of the typeBook,
De
ph: Dan MeyersGRID EXERCISE
saa | 154
Use a modular grid to arrange a text in as
many ways as you can, By employing just one
size of type, flush left only, you will construct a
typographic hierarchy exclusively by means of
spatial arrangement. To make the project more
complex, begin adding variables such as
weight, size, and alignment.Magazine page (detail
Designer: Catherine Weese
Photography: Jol Halpern
Publisher: Patsy Tare,
vice Magazine
o- _
@everove 2000 (0)
‘This chart orgies breif cereals by ;
shape and anotaes therm arcording 1.8
dozen characersics, frome fiber content 0
price per pound, Visual displays of data
allow readers to quickly compare ees
One might observe, fr example, that in i
breaks cerals, intensity of sugars |
usually accompanied by intensity of color,DATA TABLES
NEW JERSEY TRANSIT, NoReTIEEASTE
origi
I schedule with redesign by Edward Tale
From Edward Tufte, Emusioning Information {Cheshire, Gorm. Graphies Press, 1990)
The original design (top i onganed witk heauy horizontal and vertical divisions. Ti alls this a
“data prison.” Fis redesign uses the alignment ofthe Kppographic elements themselves to expres te
table's underlying structure
Frecoun | ACCOUNT nae frorai ror acca
fea ee [eee
| [3 fawcaemsts [we
= PestaelShppngtecalCouier [20
e
(Cour
[toe | ffemp SistConbedvst fr
[F576 | Ronerane mene anet [STs
PePanmenrat exrevommunes [aa
The desi
subtle
a of charts and graphs is a rich and
(ea of typographic practice. In a data
table, the grid acquires semantic s
Designers (and software defaults) often over-
emphasize the grid, rather than allowing the
data to command the page and stake out its
own territory.
nificance,
rules and boss sed in dats tales
ul iteminate the relationships
famang data, not tap each entry inside
eovily guarded cllDATA TABLE EXERCISE cour |158
| 118 BEHAVIOUR 70 INTOXIOATED FRIENDS.
Tabrilar Viow.—Eeperiments on Ants under
Ohitoroform and Intoxicated.
ij Onronovonmup ANrs.
i ames races
To Kent
a
and brought
‘out again
1
and brought
out again
Data table From Sir Jolin Lubbock,
: aa ° ae Arts, Bes, and Wasps (New York
snd brought D, Appleton ard Compsny 1893).
‘eat again The author of hic oxpoinot
: 5 stuied how ants responded upon
ik Pale j ening ther end embers
‘oftheir ow colony) or “rangers”
In the frat expernrent, the fends
and strangers were rendered
i Tyroxtcaran ANTS.
| MICE etiam ori wee Lea
| xov. 20 3 unconscious with chloroform
Tn these cases some of the Ants bad party recovered were merely nese, The
following they were quite insensible. by laroferined anis—wheiler ends
/ nay e epee 2 ee or srnges—were sual ten
sone Hrongbt al these for dea and picked ino of |
| ont again brought ont ter surrounding te colo |
i rail itowicated ants were treate
" ay . 4 ctl The inoscated ont were ete .
, Sie bopegte mS bor aaa aoe
i ont again brought out the doen fends wee taken bak
again, tothe nest for cre and tehab
Jan. 15 4 afi
15 4 i ition, whereas dren sane
uve generally ose ino the moat,
Anis, one might conclude, should not
‘elo the hinds of semper
i
zone broaght
‘out again— ts
DATA TABLE EXERCISE
4 oo g
5 ‘ :
g 5
5
ocr :
3
oe o | 8
& 5
| a
mn |s6 a oa 2 2 rs °;
Find a chart from an old science book or ‘The redesign (above) eliminates many of the ruled
other source, and redesign it, Shown at lines, replacing them, where needed, with a pale tone
left is @ nineteenth-century table that unifies the long horizontal rows of data. The
documenting an experiment about ants, redesigned chart also replaces most of the numerals
The old design emphasizes vertical with dots, a technique that lets the eye visually
divisions at the expense of horizontal compare the results without having to read each
cones, and it jumbles together text and numeral separately.
numbers within the table cells,cnin | rGe
'Fedra Sans 2.0
took Normat Medium Bold
lenin (16.04 2009) oe
a iad revdeon 8
campos of Teague ft
[Link]
Web site, 2003
Designer: Peter Bilak
Malt-clurnn grids provide a
ib
logic! way 20 organize
pages, Content occupies the center
the top ara ig “margis” are
served for branding ond
navigation.nap | x62
Housera-Rama Fonckiw $100
Dieser CTT
Leming, Ken
Rat, anid Bonvn clecken ferAPPENDIX
Helpful hints, dire warnings,
and other resourcesI
DASHTS, SPACES, AND PUNCTUATION avernaix 164
‘These interruptions—especially the snide remarks.-are driving me crazy.
“GRIME: Tivo hyphens in plac of em ash
Dashes expres bre i the fw aa sentence, th a word process
document, dss can be indicated wit two liye. Ee
guirud, however, typesetting, No spaces ae use around dashes
Fl Lissitzky lived 1890-1941. Rodchenko lived longer (891-1956).
Emr: Hyplcn betwen subers
‘Ave dash eect two numbers. yeas “up to anc ined,
2 hat "bein" No spaces are esed around en dashes
It's okay to be second-best, but never, ever second-best.
{GwEM: fll ie hyphenated wont
Do vot usec dashes where the huneble ype ts regard
tthe word... Typography came later.
sis character sed here in place of separ pois
In the beginning was.
The povids in an lips cam be separate with wont spaces, oF as we pref Wey can be
1). Mos typefices include an lips characte, whose points are
ms)
‘mow ightly spaced. Afra sentenve, ws a period plus a ellipsis (oar
She was 2" with eyes of blue. "I'm not dumb," she said. "I'm prime.”
Prime marks (aka dumb quotes) sed place of
ation marks
The purpose of prime mars, or hath mats, i toDudeate inches
and,
ypognaphieladscape
1. Their ust wark quotations is commen Bligh across the
“('m not smart,” he replied. “I'm a quotation mark.”
Unlike prime marks, quotation marks include wn opening ad losing
shavacter. Single clase quotes oko serve as apostrophes, Sncoreily used
be rote om and cso
ime marks Dns
Don't put two spaces between sentences. They leave an ugly gap.
eam: Th
Altnowgh writers persis in patting double spaces betugen sentences
{a kab ofc earned in high cho, al such spaces west be purge
from
Imamasrin whe is sel type.appexvix | 165
DASHES. Dashes of different length have specific
uses that every designer must learn. Weitexs
‘or dlients often supply manuscripts that employ
correct dashes or tse substitute characters.
Eat pasitss express strong gearnmtiea breaks. An et
‘ssh is oneem wide—the wills of the point size ofthe
typeface. In manuseripts, dashes are often represented
with « double hyphen (; these must be replaced
EW Dasites serve primarily to connect numbers (110)
Ancen is half the wid of an em, Mumseripts rarely
‘employ en dashes, so the designer needs to supply the
vevricens connect Naked words and phases, and they
break words ¢ the ends of lines. Typesetting oprams
break words automaticaly: Disable ato hyphenation wlten
working with ragged or centered text use disceetionszy
hyphens instead, aid only when unavoidable
DISCRETIONARY atveHEENS, which are inserted manly
to break ines, only appeat in the document if they are
needed. (Fa tet is rellowed in subsequent editing, 3
liscretionary hyphen will disappear) Wayward hyphens
often occur in the mid-dle ofa line when the
hard” hyphen insted of a
inserted
runcroarion Consult a definitive work such as
The Chicago Manual of Style for complete rules of
punctuation, The following are especially pertinent
for ypogeaphers
‘quorari0x sans have distinet “open” and ‘closed
forms, unlike *hateh marks,” which are straight up and
dovin. A single dase quote algo serves as an apostrophe
(Ie Bob's font”), Hatch marks should enly be used to
Indicate inches and feet (32). Used incorrectly, hatches
te known as “dumb quotes.” Although computer
operating ystems and fypeseting programs often inckude
aulomatic “smart quote” features, emailed, word:
processed, and/or client-suppled text can be riddled with
Gumb quotes, Auto sinart quote programs ofien render
apostrophes upside down (‘tis instead of "ts, so designers
rust be vigikint and lear the necessary keystrokes.
ELL0StS consist of three periods, sehich can be rendered
will 1 spaces between them, of with open tracking
Aletterspacing), or with word spaces, An ellipsis indicates
an omitted section in 2 quoted text or. emporal break
Most typefiees include an ellipsis character, whi
prosonts closely spaced points
‘wou graces are created by the space bar. Use just one
space between sentences er alle a comma, clon, ot
semicolon, One ofthe frst sleps in typesetting 3
manuscript is to purge ie ofall double spaces, Thus the
space bar should not he used to ereate indents
DASHES, SPACES, AND PUNCTUATION
or otherwise postion text om a line, Use tabs insu
inva zefuses to recognize double spaces altogether
EN spaces are wider than word spaces, An en space can
be used Io rendera mote emphatic distance between
clements on a line: for example, to separate a subliead
from the tex Uhat immediately follows, or to separate
clements gathered slon
Te Reyrakes Usted below are connmony wed in word
processing, poge fyou, aud illustration sevare
Roystrakes will ary in sone applications, (These work for
(Quark XPress and Desig. J Sone fonts do not include
fill age of special characters,
Dasies keystrokes (Mac)
— em-dash shiftoption-hyphen
= enedash, option-hyphen
+ standard hyphen {hyphen key)
discretionary hyphen command-hyphen
PUNCTUATION keystrokes (Mac)
single open quote option-]
* single close quote shift-option-]
double open quote option
double close quote shift-option-
cllipsis option
OTHER MARKS keystrokes (Mac)
{en space option-space bar
i dagger option-t
} double dagger shiftcoption
© copytightsymbol —_option-g
@® tesister symbol option
ligature shifi-option
fi fi ligature shiftoption:5
fl Mligature shiftoption-6
optione +e
6 accent aigu
& option: + «
accent grave
2 accent grave option” +a
0 accent grave option +0
¢ cédille option-c
ii umlaut option-u+u
8 umiaut option +0EDITING annnnoix | 166
Only an editor can see beyond a writer's navel.
No matter how brit your prose a elitr wil discover errors
fn spelling, grammar, consistency, ralundaney, end construction,
Writers should not over-format their texts.
The time you spend fdling with Jormatting wil be spend again by the eter and/or
7 ant, double-spaced
sgn omaving est beetrales, Provide flush lef copy in on
Some lessons learned in high school are best forgotten.
‘One ofthe is doting your swith hearts and smiley faces The other is leaving te
spaces beeen serene. typesetting, ome space ly rust be Ff beaween semen
The space bar is not a design tool.
+ bro rete ident jus key bv a ingle dub), and dont vse ero
Dow’ use thes
spars to create centered effets oF layout funless you reall cree. e caminings)
Every change threatens to introduce new errors.
Finch time a file is Torectat” new errors can uppea, fem: problems with rags, jusicaion,
sara jag brenks to spelling mistakes, mising words, and botched or incomplete corecions.
Don’t wait for the proofs to seriously examine the typeset text.
‘Changes made afer a printers roafhas fen made (hue tine, press proof or ater)
‘arcexpensive, They aso will slow down your projet, which, of cours, is rendy ate.
Famous last words: “We'll catch it in the blue lines.”167
EDCTORS Since the onslaught of desktop publishing
back in the dark days of the mid-r980s, graphic
designers have taken on roles formerly occupied by
distinet trades, such as typesetting and mechanical
pasteup. Designers are often expected to be editors,
as well, Every project should have a true editor, a
person with the training and disposition to judge the
correctness, accuracy, and consistency of written
content, Neither a project's author nor its designer
should be its editor, who is rightly a neutral party
between them. If project team includes no properly
trained editor, ty to find one, If that fails, make sure
that someone is responsible for this crucial role, for
the failure to edit carefully is the source of costly and
embarrassing errors,
ting a text for publication has three basic
phases, Developmental editing addresses broad issues
of the content and the structure of a work; indeed,
it can include judging a work's fitness for publication
in the first place. Copy editing (also called line editing
or manuscript editing) seeks to root out
redundancies, inconsistencies, grammatical excors,
and other fiaws appearing across the body of the
work. The copy editor—who must study every word
and sentence—is not expected to question the overall
meaning or structure of a work, nor to alter an
author's style, but rather to refine and correct.
Pronjeading, which checks the correctness,
consistency, and flow of designed, typset pages, is
the final stage. Depending on the nature of the
project and its team, each of these phases may go
through several rounds,
EDITING
ANATOMY OF AW ERROR After a document has
been written, edited, designed, and proofread, a
printer's proof is created by the printer from the
digital files supplied by the designer. At this point,
making changes is expensive, Many clients (or
authors) fail to recognize errors {or make decisions}
until the printer's proofs are issued. This luxury has
its costs, and someone will have to pay.
e's (omnes unuows) These are errots that ean b
assigned! tothe peinter, and they must be corrected at no
‘expense to the designer ar client. A printer's errar is an
cobsious and blatant divergence rom the digital files and
other instructions provided by the designer and agreed to
by the printer. Printers errs are surprisingly rate in the
digital age
sas (auriton's arterarions) ‘These sre not so rare:
‘Autho’s alterations are changes to the approved text or
layout of the work. Ifthe charige originates with the
designer, the designer is responsible, ft originates with
the client or author, she or be is responsible, Keeping
records of each phase of » projects development is helpful
in assigaing bla Designers can charge the client a
fae forthe Ax on top of the printer's fee, asthe designer
must corret the file, print out new hard copy. get the
licat’s approval (agai), communicate with the printer
(again), and so on. If agreed to in advance, designers can
chagge aa Fes for any change to an approved document,
‘even before the printer’ proof is issued.
15 (uprton’s atrsasrions) Ervors made by the editor are
the responsibilty ofthe cditor's employer, ypically the
client of publisher of the work, Good editors beip prevent
everyone’serrors from occurring inthe first place,
For more detailed information about the editorial
process, see The Chicago Manat of tye, st Fliion
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003,
‘Manuscript editing, also called copyediting or line editing, requires attention to every word in,
amanuscript, a thorough knowledge of the style to be followed, and the ability to make quick,
logical, and defensible decisions. The Chicago Manual of Style, 2003EDITING HARD coPY aronnpix | 168.
i ene
! Writers, editors, and designers use special symbols to mark changes such
Fposeezans J ees
TRANSPOSE asdeletie®, fOsM@ansJor Sormectiag Gords o: phrases. Ifyou change
your mind about a-deletie/place dots beneath it, Remove a commagby ‘
ster (“LET 1 stan") circling it. Add a period with a circled doRit two words nif ogetber, insert a
=
| adihyace Straight line and a space mark
i SHPARATS; ADD SPACE ——
fo combine two paragraphs, connect them with a line and note the comment
i me i eet ten vata Ine ae aoe e
Soe “run-in” in the margin, (Circling notes prevents the typesetter from
Dp confusing comments with content} :
‘glare
REMOVE HYPHEN Insert two short lines to hyphenate @ word suelt as secondrate. When
” = in
Dashing-no? removing a hyphen, close up the lender space. To replace a hyphen with an
Pag DASH ES em dasffa symbol that expresses a grammatical brealt'write a tiny a above
"
| song igi fhe nynten, Ifa mmanuseriot ndicries Grates yl dounte amt einen
i ey the typesetter or designer is expected to convert them without being told. 4
| a "
Use an en dash, not a hyphen, to connect two numbers, such as 19141918
| ITALIC ie es ‘ ee
seldice In addition to correcting grammar, spelling, punctuation, and clarity of prose, i
BOLDFACE, editors indicate typographic styles such as italic (with an underscore} and
| monove und boldface (with a wavy line). Underlining, which is rarely used in formal
] Une typography, is rerpoved like this. Qraw ® Wine Warough 4 Kapital eter to ;
! 8
i Wik change it to lowercase underline a letter with three strokes to capitalize
WERCASE
a eee Use two underlines to indicate small capitals, ;
! Sarcae Double-space the manuscript and leave a generous margin to provide roam
for comments and corrections. Align the text flush lef, ragged right, and
a nd com e h Teft, ragged right, |
‘SHALL CAPS, disable automatic byphenation.
y Don't mark manuscripts
or pragfs with Post-It notes
They can fall off, block
/ the text, and make the
document hard to photocopy.arranpix | 169
EDITING SOFT COPY
Editing an electronie file and allowing the author to see the changes is
called redtining (also referred to as “editing online"). Basic housekeeping
inclades removing all double spaces and converting hatehes (aka, “dumb
quotes") to quotation marks and apostrophes (a.k.a. “smart quotes"). The
editor need not point out these changes to the author.
Changes to the structure and wording of the text must be
communicated to the author. A visual convention is needed for showing,
deleted and added material, Akonekteherermeved are typically struck out
and words added or substituted can be underlined, highlighted, or rendered
in color. A line in the margin indicates that a change has been
recommended, (Queries to the author are set off with brackets.)
Underlining, or striking out; punctuation is visually confusing, so the
editor often strikes out an entire wordreephrese—or phrase—and types
in the frestily punctuated passage as an addition. To hyphenste a word such
as seetetnats second-rate, strike it out and add the hyphenated form. When
converting hyphens to en dashes (1914~18)—or changing double hyphens to
‘em dashes—the editor simply keys them in. Typogeaphie styles such as italic
boldface, and sacats. caprrats can also be changed directly.
Although redlining is wonderfully fluid and direct, it can be
dangerous, The editor must scrupulously remove all traces of the editing,
process before releasing the file for design and typesetting. Potential disasters
inchide words that are stucktogetber, a missing , ora forgatten comment to
the author [Are you nuts?)
A. Queries to the author can also take the form of Foetpotes. Mlntify these notes with
losers, so they are nat confused with footnotes that belong to the text,acranpix |169
EDITING SOFT copy
Editing an electronic file and allowing the author to see the changes is,
called redtining (also referred to as “editing online"), Basic housekeeping
includes removing all double spaces and converting hatches (aka. “dumb
quotes") to quotation marks and apostrophes (a-k.. “smart quotes”). The
editor need not point out these changes to the author:
Changes to the structure and wording of the text must be
communicated to the author. A visual convention is needed for showing
deleted and added material, Hondoterheremeved are typically struck out
and words added or substituted can be underlined, highlighted, or rendered
§n color. A Line in the margie indicates that a change bas been
recommended. [Queries to the author ae set off with brackets]
Underlining, or striking out, punctuation is visually coitfusing, so the
editor often strikes out an entire wordreephrese—or phrase—and types
in the freshly punctuated passage as an addition, To hyphenate a word such
as seednate second-rate, strike it out and add the hyphenated form, When
converting hyphens to en dashes (1914~18)—or changing double hyphens to
‘em dashes—the editor simply keys them in. Typographic styles such as italic
boldface, and swat carirats can also be changed directly.
Although redlining is wonderfully fluid and direct, it can be
dangerous. The editor must scrupulously remove all traces of the editing
process before releasing the file for design and typesetting, Potential disasters
include words that are stucktogether, a missing, or 2 forgotten comment to
the author [Are you nuts?].
A. Queties to the author ean also tale the form of footnotes, Mentify these notes with
levers, so they are not confused with footnotes that belong tothe textPROOFREADING APpENDIN. 170
tee
@ C®
+
g
x
+
parseronh Carag
stort new parograph | satt ow paragraph
0
Corwsit
D7 inden om
Insert punctustion inser, punctstion
ol
Ai
insert type Ineo roe
ier pretense ioseryprentncy —(f.)
Hr eo ihe a
ican
€iz
capitalize capitalie
change tokvercie YER
spl on abbreviation
change o smal caps small cs
change to hold bald
hang
rome ft wonon)
8980 O@sepespix | 175 PROOFREADING.
(y Phoornsaprnc takes place after an edited manuseript has been
designed and typeset. New errors can appear at any time during the
handling of a document, and old creeps unrecognized— bt
can leap to the eye once the text has beén set in type. The proofreader
corrects gross errors in spelling, grammar, and fact, but avoid 9, G
changes in style and content. Changes at this stage are not ouly
expensivabut they can affect the page design and introduce new
problems,
Proofreading iglifferent task from editing, although the editor
may play a role in it, along withor in addition tothe author or client,
Athgugh the designer or ipesetiey should not be given the role of
proof reader, designers must nonetheless inspect their work carefully
for dors before sending it back to the editor, author, or client.
Naakcall corrections inthe margin of the prof nd inlet the position
EEE iin the text Dont we hewn the lines Many of these
Fiteine symbols are used in proofreading and incopy eting, but protresders
seat addtional et of tags for marginal notes.
Dex Shieh beg rte on d-iltedPhs Ie pps ea
Mark ll changes on one master proof, I several copies ofthe proof are
culated for approval ene person (usually the eto) is responsible for
transferring corrections toa master copy.
Don't give the designee a proof with contig oe indeciskecomment
GN) PEs oF prog Depending on how a project is oxganized and
produced: some or all of the following proofs may be involved
Gailey proofs ate typically supplied in booksength projec. They consist of test
hat has er typeser but not paginated aldo not yet include Musrations
Page proof ae broken into jogs and include ilstations, page numbers
running beads, aud other detail
{| visa prof nce changes that hve been recommend iy he profreader
and input by the designer or ypeseter. a
riers proof are generated by the printer, At thie phase, changes become
increasingly costly, complex, and ill-advised. tn theory, one iff ooBPor
Printers etrors—not esrors indesign or verbal style—at this Sage, Printet =
proofs might inclu blue fines fone color onl) stor eolor poo
1. The designer and typesetter may be the same person. fa design studio, as opposed
to a publishing hone, designers are generily responsible for typesetPREE ADVICE spre oae [173
‘Think more, design less.
Many desperate ats of desig (ineialng gradients, drop shadows, ara dhe gratuitous use
oftnspaeency) are perpetrate tn the absence ofa strong des a
framework for design decisions, guiding the work
pro
Say more, write less.
wit arbitrary wsua efi, uniter
Just as designers should avoiding up sp
remeber th as muck as sep do
one laes ther wor
Spend more, buy less.
Cheap shuff's usualy cheap becarse of Now is made, what is made af
anal who made, By beter quality goods, ess ote
May your thoughts be deep and your wounds be shallow.
Always work witha sharp bade, Although graphic design is mot a terribly dangerous
vccidents occur inoling dull X-Acto Blades, Protect your
eipation, mary lav-n
printouts from senseless Blodshed
Density is the new white space.
rely knit nejghborkoods have renew appeal
So, 40, on pig and seen, where ich teste of information ca fncion
[Link] era ofexurban spr
later thaw sparaenes ead isolation
‘Make the shoe fit, not the foot.
ce content ima rigid containers,
athe thar. te sytem that are flee and
responsive to the material they ave
f to acrommadd
Make it bigger. (Cowtsy of Paula Scher)
Amateur typographers make sir type too big, The 2-poine delice looks oy
ton the secen—afe looks horsey othe page. Expoieaced designers, however, muhe
Scala
their type 00 tine sours Here, 7.5 patarvexpix [173
FREE ADVICE
Itis easier to talk than to listen.
Pay atetion to your eens, your asers, your readers, an your frends
Your design wil et beter as pou iste to other people
Design is an art of situations.
Designers respond to need, a problem, a clrcumnstaec, tat arises tn the work
The best work is produced in relaion to interesting stuations—aw open-minded
tient, «good case, oF reat content
No job is too small.
A giaphic designer oa set otto change the world one business can at time
Jong as isthe business card ofa really interesting person.
‘An interface calls attention to itself at its point of failure.
Desig ps the stems of dey life rr smoothly, eng uses ant waders ignore
‘how things are pu sogether, Design sould sometimes announce isin order to shed
ligh on she system, exposing ks construction, identity, personality and pelts.
‘The idea is the machine that makes the art. (Courtesy of ol fav)
A powreil comcept can drive decisions abo [Link], oe cho, fart, and soo
preventing senseless ats of whisp. (On the other hand, senseless ats of wim sometimes
lead to powerful concepts.)
‘The early bird gets to work before everyone else.
Yur os ine Jr inking could be ear in the mmarting, late at wight, o een, tn ave
drcamsances, during las or betwven wine and five, Whether your Bes time isin the
shower, atthe gym, or the eri, nse fr your ares ranking
Build the discourse.
Desig socal. ives in sien i creas sey ant med see oft en —
4 consi of dsipers commited to advancing and dating our shard hopes and
tess, Rea, wrt, and tal abou design whenever you can
Go forth and reproduce.PRAISE
oR
Thinking with Type
This beautifully designed book
on understanding typography fills big
VOID.
Itenables the reader to grasp the principles of
typogiaphy through inspiting examples coupled
th warm, straightforward ey
[will urge my students to read it, absorb it,
and he inspired by
PAULA SCHER
And I will do so myself
This book is essential reading for the
design student and the perfect wake-up
DRUG
‘or the most stodgy of design experts,
upion’s
instructional, humorous, and wise.
JOHN MAEDA
prose
‘This engaging book offers principles
without dogma and history without
ARCANA.
In short, itisacompendium for
Titerate typographie practice.
ANDREW BLAUVELT
Ellen Lupton isa stylish
TASKMASTER.
| couldn't put it down.
ABBOTT MILLER
‘TETE ORGANIZATION OF LETHERS on a blank page or
sereen is one of the designer's most basic challenges.
What kind of font to use? How big? How should
those letters, words, and paragraphs be aligned,
spaced, ordered, and shaped? This groundbreaking
new text, created by leading design educator and
critic Ellen Lupton, provides clear and focused
guidance for those learning or brushing up on their
typographic skills, Informative essays are followed
by practical demonstrations that bring typography
to life with direct, engaging commentary. Examples
of work by influential practitioners show how to
be inventive within a system of typographic form—
and how to break the rules.
ELLEN LUPTON is one of America's preeminent
design authors and educators. Her books include
Skin: Surface, Substance + Design, Design Culture Now,
‘Mixing Messages, and Design Writing Research, among
many others, She is curator of contemporary design at
Gooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum in New York,
and director of the Graphic Design MFA program at
Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) in Baltimore.
[Link]
Also in the Design Briefs Series from Princeton
Architectural Press: The Geometry of Design
and Grid Systems by Kimberly Elam, and
Elements of Design by Gail Gree! Hannah.
9 Mai so8l98snas
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