Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

 Font is also commonly called type or text › They all mean the same thing You can say font face or type face but they mean the same thing.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: " Font is also commonly called type or text › They all mean the same thing You can say font face or type face but they mean the same thing."— Presentation transcript:

1

2  Font is also commonly called type or text › They all mean the same thing You can say font face or type face but they mean the same thing

3 Fonts are categories of text. Common groups of fonts include: Times New Roman Arial Garamond Script Comic

4 Fonts are grouped into families and given a name:  Arial  Garamond  Comic  Times

5  Arial Black  Arial Narrow  Arial Rounded MT Bold  Arial Unicode MS It’s like your own Family. We have the Smith family Dad- Frank Smith Mom- Mary Smith Son- Sam Smith Each are part of the Smith family but they are all individuals (type style) who have the same last name.

6 Styles are applied to fonts to change the way they look. Examples of the most common type styles include: Bold Italics Book Round Heavy

7  Sam Smith with cowboy appeal  Mary Smith with Gothic appeal  Frank Smith with Business appeal You can take away their styles but they are still members of the Smith family.

8  A font/type becomes a typeface/ font face once a style has been applied to it. For example; › Arial Italic › Times New Roman narrow › Rockwell Extra Bold

9  Family  +  Style  =Type/Font Face

10

11 Oldstyle Thick/thin transition in strokes Diagonal stress Serif Serifs on lowercase letters are slanted Goudy

12  Not good choices for extended amounts of body copy  Thin lines almost disappear, thick lines are prominent  Effect on the page is called “dazzling”

13  Used in children’s books because of clean, straightforward look › Examples:  Times New Roman  Californian

14  “sans” (without) in French  No thick/thin transition  Same thickness all the way around  Great for creating eye-catching pages

15  Like cheesecake- they should be used sparingly so nobody gets sick

16  Easy to identify. If the thought of reading an entire book in that font makes you want to throw up, it falls under decorative.  Fun, distinctive  Powerful use is limited  Often used in headlines Juice Chilly cooldots

17  Serif › A typeface with lines on curves extending from the ends of the letters A B C a b c

18 SSans Serif ›A›A typeface that is straight-edged

19  x-height › The height of the body of all lowercase letters such as the letter x in a typeface. All lower case letters are designed to be no taller then the x-height. a x c Baseline Baseline An imaginary horizontal line on which the bottom of letters rest. An imaginary horizontal line on which the bottom of letters rest.

20  Ascender › The lowercase letter that extend above the x-height – b, d, f, h, and l b x h

21  Descender › The lowercase letters that fall below the baseline – g, j, p, and q g x j

22 Anatomy of Text

23  A design element in which a letter (usually the first letter of the paragraph) is much larger font and embedded into the surrounding text.

24  Tracking › A feature that enables you to adjust the relative space characters for selected text  Adjusts the space between a group of characters or words (applied to the whole word)

25  Kerning › The process of “fine tuning” spacing by adjusting the space between characters  Adjusts the space between two characters

26

27  The placement of text or graphics relative to the margins. › Left › Right › Centered › Justified

28  Reverse Type › White or light colored text that appears against a darker background Reverse Type

29  Dots, dashes, or characters that proceed text or a tab setting.


Download ppt " Font is also commonly called type or text › They all mean the same thing You can say font face or type face but they mean the same thing."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google