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Laura Egley Taylor

Then a miracle occurs . . .

that presidential font

August 25th, 2010

gotham-collageTypography on the radio! I just heard this on the program To the Best of our Knowledge: an interview with Jonathan Hoefler and Tobias Frere-Jones,* creators of the font known as Gotham.

Whether you know the name or not, you’ve seen the font. It was commissioned by GQ20080918-change_we_can_believe_in in 2000 (they were looking for a new signature font—one that was authoritative, modern and manly, of course) and selected by Barack Obama for his campaign materials in the last election.

It’s a bold, clean, geometric font, inspired by NYC signage created back when graphic designers were scarce and building signage was usually done by the architects and engineers who built the building (which explains the feel of 1940s modernism/American “rugged individualism” the font exudes). Geometric, yes, but Frere-Jones says that by allowing the forms to “escape the grid wherever necessary,” they’ve given the design a more friendly feel than most geometric fonts.

The photo collage above is made up of images collected by Hoefler and Frere-Jones for an extensive study of the lettering on buildings in the Big Apple in preparation for the GQ job. To see more, check out the Gotham photo gallery the two designers put together.

And, of course, the second photo is of Barack Obama on the campaign trail, surrounded by type set in a font we can believe in.

*If you’re at all interested in type, you owe it to yourself to spend some time on their website, Typography.com.

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belonging

May 30th, 2010

OUR book

Reeve’s home for the summer. He’s been cleaning out his room, trying to get rid of old stuff to make the space feel more like his room (as in contemporary and current), less like a shrine to his childhood. He found this in the front of an old book.

I don’t remember his writing this, but am oddly flattered—all these years later. Obviously, he thought of this book as one we read together.

You never know (except, sometimes you do! Sometimes, even 17 years down the road!) what your child notices—and claims . . . The things you do together matter.

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P.S. Killer ampersand, eh?

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C.R.A.P.

November 10th, 2009

pardner-1No, I’m not spewing epithets over here. C.R.A.P. is the easy-to-remember acronym  provided to us by the delightful and brilliant Robin Williams* for the four basic principles of design:

Contrast

Repetition

Alignment

Proximity

To give a brief demonstration of how these work, I’m including here some examples from Robin’s The Non-Designer’s Design Book.**

OK, let’s take these principles one at a time. We’ll talk about proximity first. Take a look at the flyer at the right. Notice how the little bold headers are the same distance from the lines above them and the lines below? Each line or paragraph appears to be a separate item.You can’t tell which headline the text belongs to.

And although there’s white space, it’s scattered all over the place, including places where it shouldn’t be, like between the headlines and the text that follows them. (We say this white space is trapped; and trapped white space visually pushes apart the items it’s trapped by.)pardner-2

Now, look at this version of the flyer. See how the heads and text that belong together are in proximity with one another, with each head-and-text unit separated by white space above and below?

The contact information has been grouped separately at the bottom of the page, so that the viewer can tell at a glance that it’s important. Proximity is an efficient way to immediately communicate to the viewer what he or she should pay attention to.

The alignment here has been changed from centered to left-aligned, so there’s room to make the picture bigger. This further organizes the text, so that the viewer’s eye knows where to go without any confusion, since all the lines begin at the same left margin. (Text that is centered can be difficult to read in large blocks, since the eye has to scan to find the beginning of each line.)

Let’s see. Repetition. Notice how the bold headers (ending in ellipses) are repeated. The typeface used here is also repeated throughout the flyer, as is the color (black, in this case).

pardner-3And, finally, contrast. In the flyer at the right, look at how the headline is bigger and bolder and in a typeface that contrasts with the body copy.  (This typeface is repeated for “Be a Cowboy” to bring home the message, kind of like a call to action. Repetition.)

The headline type is upper- and lowercase, which also adds contrast. (If you look at a line of text that’s in all caps, you’ll see that the shape it makes is an even rectangle. Using upper- and lowercase gives a line of text more shape.)

The little heads or lead-ins were made bigger to contrast with the text that follows them (but they’re still in the same typeface as the text that follows and still in proximity, so they still look like they belong together.)

The illustration is much bigger and was made lighter so as not to overpower the text.

So, there you have it: C.R.A.P. Granted, I’ve oversimplified here, but this gives a brief idea of how these principles work; to learn more, check out The Non-Designer’s Design Book.

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PS Oh, and you probably don’t need for me to tell you this, but. . . for all you wannabe cowboys out there . . .I’m afraid the flyer is a fake.

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*As I’ve said before, yes, THE Robin Williams (and, no, not the actor)

**Prior to working at Mothering, I had the opportunity to work with Robin on a few projects, including this book. Fabulous, fun, and edifying experience. . .

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that voice in my head

May 20th, 2009

You know how there’s this voice in your head that sometimes says things like “GO back into the house right now and put on a slip!” or “SMILE at the grouchy waiter—he’s having a bad day”. . .? That voice of instruction/barometer of appropriateness, your own internal dialogue of “thou shalts” . . . your mom’s voice?*

Well, I hear the mom voice, too, of course. Who doesn’t? But when it comes to design, I hear an altogether different voice: that of Robin Williams. (Yes, THE Robin Williams,** and, no, not the actor!)

mermaidI had the good fortune to take a class on typography from Robin in 1997 and have not been the same since. (For lots of reasons, which I’d love to talk about, including the fact that she’s now a very dear friend, but because I’m under deadline and not really supposed to be doing anything but layout, I’ll have to elaborate later.)

One of Robin’s better known maxims regarding design—one that has appeared in her design books—is “Don’t be a wimp.” I hear that one quite often.

But the phrase I hear at least once a day is something Robin said repeatedly in class: “Trust your eyes . . . . You know what you’re doing. Just look!” Many, many times over the past 12 years, that reassuring call to be present and trust myself has helped me over a creative hurdle and on to the next challenge.

OK. As Robin often says, “Anon!” Back to layout!

More about Robin later. . .

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*We included one of Mothering publisher and editor-in-chief Peggy O’Mara’s bits of wisdom along these lines in our 2009 calendar: “The way we talk to our children becomes the inner voice they hear.” (Kind of makes you think twice, doesn’t it?)

**Macintosh computer users around the world practically worship Robin for her witty, easy-to-understand tomes on all things Mac, but she’s also written brilliant books on design, typography, font management, podcasting, web design, and . . . and an in-depth look at a surprising candidate for the authorship of the works of William Shakespeare.

Image scanned from one of Robin’s 50+ books, Beyond the Mac Is Not a Typewriter (1996). Part of what I love about Robin’s books—besides the fun, sassy tone—is the wackiness of the examples she uses. Who knew learning could be such silly fun?

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intelligent design

October 21st, 2008

thinking-with-typeDid I mention we’re in a swirl of redesign action over here at Mothering? Yes, indeed. Both the magazine and the website are getting makeovers, and in my pursuit of new design input, I recently came across an exciting find: Thinking with Type by Ellen Lupton. This beautiful foray into the world of typography is a delight to pore over, chock-full of typographical tips, informative examples of design principles put into practice, and info about the historical and cultural contexts for the development of type.

The fun-to-read appendix includes a section called “Free Advice.” Here’s a sample:

Think more, design less. Many desperate acts of design (drop shadows, gradients and the gratuitous use of transparency) are committed in the void left by a strong concept.

Make the shoe fit, not the foot. Rather than force content into rigid containers, create systems that are flexible and responsive to the material they are intended to accommodate.

Check out the Thinking with Type website for a peek at what the book offers, as well as some fun and edifying games and projects, all in the name of learning how to be a more intelligent designer.

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all in the numbers

September 18th, 2008

I really like the fact that many OpenType fonts include an option for proportional oldstyle numbers (also called expert numbers)—right there in the font. Check out the difference here. See how much more elegant the second line looks?

proportional oldstyle

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