Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byCody Park Modified over 9 years ago
1
Typograpy
2
Type
3
Type - Categories Serif Fonts Oldstyle Transitional Modern Slab Serif Sans Serif Fonts Script Decorative Monospaced
4
Type - Categories Serif Fonts Oldstyle: Times, Garamond smooth transitions between thick and thin strokes rounded (bracketed) serifs, slanted serifs diagonal stress Transitional: Baskerville transition between oldstyle & modern Squared off serifs Modern: Bodoni, Didot obvious transition between thick and thin strokes angular (unbracketed serifs) vertical stress Slab Serif: Memphis, Rockwell Slight transitions between thick and thin strokes Serifs are thick, fat, horizontal vertical stress
5
Type - Categories Sans Serif Fonts: Arial, Helvetica, Futura, Franklin Gothic Without serifs Usually monoweight: no thick to thin transitions Large x-height Script Decorative - experimental, graphic
6
Type - Categories Monospaced - uniform spacing (fixed-width) Proportionately spaced fonts – font rules determine the width of the characters and space around each character (kerning-pairs)
7
Type - Size Points (1/72 inch) Pica (1 pica = 12 points) – often used to measure width 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 24, 32, 36 X-height: height of lowercase letters excluding ascenders and descenders Web (CSS) Absolute units (points, picas, millimeters, centimeters, inches) Relative units (em, ex, pixel, %)
8
Terminology - spacing Horizontal Spacing Kerning Horizontal space between individual letters Tracking Horizontal space between all characters (across word, line, column) Web (CSS properties) letter-spacing word-spacing
9
Terminology - spacing Vertical Spacing Leading Vertical Spacing between lines of text Web (CSS properties) Line-height
10
Terminology - leading
11
Type Legibility The ease with which type can be understood under normal reading conditions Clarity and recognition of letterforms, weight and proportion, all caps vs. lowercase, x-height, serif vs. sans serif Readability The quality of attracting and holding a reader’s interest, the comfort of the read Type size, letterspacing, word spacing, linespacing, line length
12
Type
18
Sources An Introduction to Type http://graphicdesign.spokanefalls.edu/tutorials/process/type_basics/default.htm http://graphicdesign.spokanefalls.edu/tutorials/process/type_basics/default.htm Thinking with Type http://www.papress.com/thinkingwithtype/text/tracking.htm http://www.papress.com/thinkingwithtype/text/tracking.htm
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.