all of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the...

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TYPOGRAPHY TERMS PARTS & CATEGORIES OF TYPE

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Page 1: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

TYPOGRAPHY TERMSPARTS & CATEGORIES OF TYPE

Page 2: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye

visual clues to decoding the letters while reading.

Many of these terms stem from a time when type was hand-written

using wedge-tipped pens.

Page 3: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

X-HEIGHT Refers to the

height of the lowercase letters.

Page 4: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

BASELINE

Imaginary horizontal line on which characters rest.

Page 5: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

CAP HEIGHT Distance

between the baseline and top of the capital letters.

Page 6: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

ASCENDERSParts of the letters that extend above the x-height.

Page 7: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

DESCENDERS

Parts of fonts that extend below the baseline.

Page 8: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

WEIGHT Is the thickness of line in the

font.

Page 9: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

PITCH The number of characters that

can be printed in one horizontal inch.

Page 10: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

POINT SIZE Point Size: l/72 of an inch. 72 points are

equal to one inch

Page 11: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

SERIFSAre the flares at the end of the letters

Page 12: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

SERIF FONTS Examples of Serif Fonts

Times New RomanGaramond

Page 13: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

SANS SERIF Without small strokes at the end of

characters. Examples of Sans Serif Fonts:

Arial TahomaAntique Olive

Page 14: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

TYPEFACE FONT STYLES A set of characters with a common

design and shape.

Such as Impact, Times New Roman, Arial

Page 15: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

TYPESTYLE 4 categories of styles

Normal (regular, roman)Bold ItalicBold italic

Page 16: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

DROP CAP Decorative first letter of paragraph or

sentence used to draw the reader’s eye. Usually used in a newsletter or article at

the beginning of text.

ŶĐĞƵƉŽŶĂƚŝŵĞ� ƚŚĞƌĞůŝǀ ĞĚ Ă ůŝƚƚůĞŐŝƌůǁ ŝƚŚďůŽŶĚĞŚĂŝƌ ͘8K

Page 17: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

TRACKING Which refers to the horizontal spacing

between letters or characters.

Page 18: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

LEADING Refers to the amount of added

vertical spacing between lines of type. In consumer-oriented word processing software, this concept is usually referred to as "line spacing".

Page 19: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

PARTS & CATEGORIES OF TYPE6 Categories into which most type can be placed.

Page 20: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

1. OLDSTYLE1. fonts with serifs.

The serifs are always slanted on lowercase letters.

These fonts make good body text. They are easy to read and hard to

distinguish from each other. Example: Goudy Old Style, Centaur

Page 21: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

2. MODERN Fonts have serifs that are thin & flat on

lowercase letters. These fonts are very good for headlines. Example is Bodoni

Page 22: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

3. SLAB SERIF fonts have little or no thick/thin

transition at all. Called Monoweight fonts. Serifs are thick & horizontal These fonts are dark and extremely

easy to read. Used for body text. Example: toxica

Page 23: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

4. SANS SERIF Monoweight fonts The word “sans” means without. Fonts without serifs. Example: Delicious, Franklin Gothic,

Arial, Trebuchet MS

Page 24: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

5. Script Fonts appear to have been hand written. Usually used to add style to a design. Not for body text.

Page 25: All of the following terms describe parts of a font that give the eye visual clues to decoding the letters while reading. Many of these terms stem from

6. DECORATIVE Fonts are ornamentals. Never used as body text. Often include symbols or flairs Use them carefully.