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It is often said that if a typographer does his job correctly then his work is invisible to the reader. The typographer sets the text and uses grid, typeface, style and all the other tools at their disposal, with the goal of allowing the content to come through. The reader is able to read the text and if the typographer has executed the design well then the reader doesn’t even consider who designed the content. They simply read.
I am a trained typographer, in fact my first internship was in an old press shop cleaning hot metal and wood type. Today everyone has access to a keyboard which automatically sets the type for them. Why should we even bother setting type correctly if our computer friends can do it for us? Well the main problem with this solution is that right now the computer doesn’t have the human sensibility. The font information it uses to set letters next to each other comes from the equations contained in the font information. It is mathematical and although it is a solid solution for body copy it is not always a good choice for headers, mast heads and titles. It is here that the human factor, the trained typographer, really does his job.
Good typography is about reading the content that you are about to design. Choose a typeface that embodies the content, or helps the content come through, and decide what information will be highlighted , turned into titles, sub heads, pull quotes etc…
After 14 years of using applications developed by Macromedia and Adobe to apply the craft of graphic design finally CS4 has come along. Don’t get me wrong I have always liked the applications that both of these companies developed. Now that they are one company and they made their customers pay for their merger (CS3 quickly followed by CS4) I was concerned about the future of computer tools to perform our craft. But I have been really surprised by the thought and usefulness of all of the CS4 applications. They are better and actually take into consideration process and flow of the graphic design practitioner.
After years of having to spend our creativity on workarounds and learning curves the Adobe applications have finally arrived. Apparently it takes over 15 years to get it right. Think about that for a while, I have been. It has taken an application giant 15 years to get applications right. So that means that in another 8 years HTML will finally get it right, it still is a mess of development tools and languages. Not to mention the number of workarounds and fixes.
Congratulations Adobe, great job. Microsoft still hasn’t gotten it right and Apple is getting close to perfection, and the web is well not quite right. But we are getting there. Slowly.