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Design and Typography Chapter 4
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4.1Designing a Publication Designing is the process of determining the format and layout, then creating Format: how and what a publication is made of Layout: the arrangement of elements on each page Elements: text, titles, pictures, symbols, lines, etc.
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Steps to Designing a Publication Determine the purpose, audience, and format Draw thumbnail sketches Review the sketches in terms of the four design concepts: –Appropriateness –Balance –Focus and flow –Consistency Revise thumbnail sketches Create the publication Print and review Make any changes Repeat steps 6 and 7
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4.2Purpose and Audience Purpose refers to the intent of the publication –Most publications have more than one purpose Audience is the people that will read the publication –Consider: Age, location, common interests, educational backgrounds, etc.
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4.3Formats Binding: The method that keeps the pages together –Folds –Saddle-stitch –Side-staple –Wire –Plastic comb –Perfect –Three-ring Distribution: How the reader gains possession of a publication
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4.5Concepts of Design 4 basic concepts –Appropriateness –Balance –Focus and flow –Consistency Directly related to the visual aspects of a publication
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4.6Appropriateness How well the elements in the publication match the purpose and audience Fonts, graphics, layout See page 4-6 for an example
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4.7Balance The relative weight, heavy or light, of each element and how they work together The thicker, darker, or larger an element is, the heavier it appears on a page. Heavy elements should balance with the rest of the design Placement also influences the balance –Top heavy vs. bottom heavy, for example Varying graphic placement makes a publication more interesting Readability: how easily the reader can understand the publication
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4.8Focus and Flow Focus: where the reader’s eye goes when first looking at the page Flow: where the eyes travel around the page White Space: any blank area on a page –Shape of white space influences the directions that the reader’s eye travels Tension: an asymmetrical layout, not perfectly equal in every way; creates a sense of movement that is essential to successful designs
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4.9Consistency The glue in a design –A publication is held together by elements repeated in the layout –Repetition creates expectancy in the reader Visual Cue: a pattern or object that the reader sees and identifies with an element –Rule: a line –Dingbat: small graphics The longer the publication, the more consistency is needed
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4.10 Introducing Typography Refers to the arrangement, shape, size, style, and weight of text Crucial for conveying the desired message to the audience Typeface: a set of letters drawn in a specific style Font: a specific size and weight of a single typeface
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Font Categories Serif: small extensions found on the ends of letters –Used for body text because they are more readable Sans Serif: Sans means without; no extensions –Used for headlines and titles Decorative: fonts that don’t fit into the serif or sans serif categories (page 4-12) –Used for advertisements and invitations
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Parts of a Font Cap Height: the height of the capital letters Baseline: the imaginary line where the bottom of the letters sit Ascenders: the parts of lowercase letters that rise above the x-height Descenders: the parts of lowercase letters that hang below the baseline X-height: the height of lowercase letters, not including ascenders and descenders Counters: the empty spaces completely surrounded by a letter
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More About Fonts Points: The measurement of a font –One point is 1/72 of an inch Point size is determined by the designer Type Style: the variations of the characters –Bold, italic, underline
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4.11 Using Fonts, Sizes, and Styles Formatting: applying options to highlighted text Use the Type Menu in PageMaker Use the Character submenu to change several formats at once Subscript: Text that sits below the line Superscript: Text that sits above the line
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4.13Leading The distance from one line of text to another Leading values affect the readability and weight of a publication The longer the line length of text, the more leading that is needed Leading is measured in points
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