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Fr. 79.00
Mark Argetsinger, Mark Artgetsinger
A Grammar of Typography - Classical Design in the Digital Age
English · Hardback
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Description
How can designers today achieve classical book design when it derives from an era of hot metal? This book has the answer.
List of contents
Contents
Introduction: The Classical Tradition. A detailed sketch of the establishment of the theory of typographical classicism with Joseph Moxon's architectural analogy. This classicism is situated in the Renaissance rediscovery of the mathematics of Ancient Greece, and its assault by the Modernist school in the 20th century is looked to as source of disorganization of typographic standards today.
Chapter 1: A Short History of Typographical Variations. The forms that typographical letterforms took when cast in lead at the inception of printing are examined in an annotated pictorial survey.
Chapter 2: Type in the 20th and 21st Centuries. The upheavals of typographic letterforms are chronicled through the transition of letterpress to offset printing, and the phenomenon of type revivals and type design in general are examined.
Chapter 3: Desktop Publishing. The technological transition from letterpress to offset and digital printing is further examined through the means of a timeline and commentary on the developments that resulted in the present disposition of desktop publishing.
Chapter 4: Basic Layout-Type. A Short explication of the use of InDesign as medium of typesetting.
Chapter 5: Basic Layout-Images. A Short explication of the use of InDesign as medium of incorporating images within the page.
Chapter 6: Format and Mise-en-Page. The all-important explication of proportions of the page and the disposition of a book's margins.
Chapter 7: Composition. A detailed study of typesetting with a view to its rules for best practices.
Chapter 8: OpenType Fonts and Font Editing. The digital technology of OpenType fonts has brought about the restoration of sound typography to the digital world. And the ability to edit type renders a typographer's powers whole again.
Chapter 9: Page Elements and Make-up of Pages. How type is arrayed on the page and how pages are made-up in a book to best ease and aid readers' comprehension.
Chapter 10: Printers' Manuals and House Style. The trade's standards as expressed in its peculiar literature of the printer's manual and various house styles are examined, along with a draft proposal of a house style for these latter days.
Chapter 11: Proof-Reading and Copy-Editing. Publishing houses used to proof-read and copy-edit to an extraordinarily high standard, which arts have been degraded or eliminated entirely in the new model of self-publishing. These two essential aspects of the book are discussed and an explication of proof-readers' mark is added.
Chapter 12: Paper: The Substrate of the Book. As the drama of highly acidic paper in 19th-century books proved, a book lives by virtue of its paper. A concise history of paper is followed by practical choices for the modern book designer.
Chapter 13: Binding: The Book's Carapace. How a book is bound determines its utility and longevity. A survey of binding history is followed by practical choices for the modern book designer.
Appendices:
1. Typographic Ornament: A Short Overview
2. A Note on Greek Types. An exploration, first, of historical cast-type ornaments, showing examples of contemporary usage, and, second, of the needlessly controversial history of Greek typographical forms.
Annotated bibliography. A selective bibliography of essential or useful books with an annotated characterization of each.
Index
About the author
Mark Argetsinger is a celebrated designer who has won awards in publication design competitions hosted by the Association of University Presses (AUP), the American Institute of Graphic Arts (AIGA), and the American Alliance of Museums (AAM). Argetsinger is also the recipient of the Carl Hertzog Award for Excellence in Book Design.
Summary
How can designers today achieve classical book design when it derives from an era of hot metal? This book has the answer.
Additional text
Praise for A Grammar of Typography
“Argetsinger has created what will be considered the definitive work on the subject of the history and application of book design.”—Fine Books & Collections
“A born classic….How can you not love a book with an introduction titled ‘The Hidden Soul of Harmony: The Classical Tradition. A Practice in Search of a Theory‘? Although Argetsinger claims ‘this is primarily a practical manual, not a scholarly treatise,‘ one would be hard-pressed to find a more philosophical look at ‘marks of quotation,’ ‘font editing,’ or ‘horizontal space.’….Open it anywhere and start reading.”—Graphic Arts Collection, Princeton University
“Argetsinger is a top-notch expert on the subject of typography, well suited to tackle the enormous task of an overall review of the art, from its beginnings through to today’s digital permutations....To anyone who works with type, I recommend you acquire this book. Students studying the art of typography can find no better source for all the information needed to learn the craft. For professional designers, I consider A Grammar of Typography mandatory.”—Jerry Kelly, Printing History, the journal of the American Printing History Association
Product details
Authors | Mark Argetsinger, Mark Artgetsinger |
Publisher | GODIN |
Languages | English |
Product format | Hardback |
Released | 19.12.2019 |
EAN | 9781567926538 |
ISBN | 978-1-56792-653-8 |
No. of pages | 496 |
Subjects |
Humanities, art, music
> Art
> Interior design, design
DESIGN / Graphic Arts / Typography, Book design, DESIGN / History & Criticism, Typography & lettering |
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