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Typography: A Very Short Introduction

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Typography, the art of designing printed words, was once the domain of an elite few artists but has become an area with which millions of people engage daily. The widespread usage of digital devices from laptops to tablets and smart phones which are used for written communications means that we are regularly asked to make decisions about the fonts, sizes, and layouts we use in our writing. This broadening engagement with the field of typography has led to a perceptible shift from debates about legibility and technicalities to conversations about which fonts best reflect the writer's personality or style .

In this Very Short Introduction, Paul Luna offers a broad definition of typography as design for reading, whether in print or on screens, where a set of visual choices are taken to make a written message more accessible, more easily transmitted, more significant, or more attractive. Considering the development of letterforms and the shapes of letter we use, Luna discusses the history behind our modern day letters and fonts, before considering the issues behind key typographic decisions, and the differences between printed and on-screen typography. Presenting any piece of typography as a fundamental design choice, Luna introduces the options available today, and explores the reasons why key typographic decisions are made.

Author: Luna Paul
Publisher: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pages: 176
ISBN: 9780199211296
Cover: Paperback
Edition Number: 1
Release Year: 2018

Preface

Acknowledgements

1: Perfect letters

2: Practical letters

3: Presenting language

4: Genre and layout

5: Persuasion, information, art

6: Picture language

7: Evidence for design decisions

8: Positive typography

Appendix 1: Dogma for designers

Appendix 2: Good practice in typesetting

Further reading

Index

Paul Luna is Emeritus Professor of Typography and Graphic Communication at the University of Reading. Before this he was head of corporate design at Oxford University Press and responsible for the design of major publications such as the Oxford English Dictionary, bilingual dictionaries, the Oxford Shakespeare, and the Revised English Bible.

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