GDS Chapter 3 Flashcards

1
Q

What is a typeface?

A

The design of a single set of characters unified by consistent visual properties.

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2
Q

How is height measured?

A

In points.

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3
Q

How is width measured?

A

In picas.

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4
Q

What are em units?

A

The width of the uppercase M in the parent face and point size.

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5
Q

What is the baseline?

A

The bottom of letters, excluding descenders.

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6
Q

What is a character?

A

A letterform, numeral, punctuation mark, or any single unit in a font.

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7
Q

What is a counter?

A

The space enclosed by the strokes of a letter.

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8
Q

Describe a serif.

A

A small stroke added to the upper or lower end of the main stroke of a character.

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9
Q

What is the x-height?

A

The height of a lowercase letter, excluding ascenders and descenders.

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10
Q

Explain type family.

A

A type family includes many style variations of a single typeface.

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11
Q

Before choosing a typeface, what should you consider?

A

The audience, the tone, personality, and attitude of what you are communicating, as well as historical and aesthetic meaning.

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12
Q

Define readability vs legibility.

A

Readability is the ease in which text is read; legibility is how easily a person can recognize the letters in a typeface.

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13
Q

Rules for typeface pairing.

A

Limit mixing and select for contrast and variation, pair complementary typefaces, pair typefaces with different textures, and choose within type family, extended family, or super family.

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14
Q

What is typographic texture?

A

The overall density or tonal quality of a mass of type on a field.

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15
Q

What is letterspacing?

A

The spatial interval between letters. Adjusting this is called kerning.

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16
Q

What is line spacing?

A

The spatial interval between two lines of type measured vertically from baseline to baseline, which is traditionally called leading.

17
Q

In regards to spacing, check for…

A

…word spacing, line length, unevenness, and widows and orphans.

18
Q

What is a widow?

A

A very short line of text or a word that appears at the end of a paragraph.

19
Q

What is an orphan?

A

A very short line of text or a word that appears at the beginning or end of a column that is separated from the rest of the paragraph.

20
Q

How can you make content more appealing?

A

Break it into modules.

21
Q

What arrangement of text is best for screen-based communication?

A

Chunks.

22
Q

What does pacing involve?

A

Creating a visual sense of rhythm, creating variation and allowing the reader’s eyes to rest somewhere in the text.

23
Q

What do margins do?

A

Allow the reader to focus in on the text.

24
Q

How are type size and leading indicated?

A

By placing type size over point leading.

25
Q

What kind of typefaces should you choose for a text heavy design?

A

Typefaces that are very readable and part of an extended family.

26
Q

What kind of typefaces should you choose for a nearly equal volume of text and images?

A

Highly readable typeface that fits the purpose and aesthetic of the images.

27
Q

What kind of typefaces should you choose for image heavy design?

A

Content and design concept should drive the selection.

28
Q

What kind of typefaces should you choose for caption heavy design?

A

Typeface that is readable at smaller point size.

29
Q

How do you improve readability?

A

Use left-justification or justified alignment, break text into manageable chunks, use strong contrast between type and background, keep line lengths a bit shorter, and use typefaces with larger x-heights.

30
Q

What impedes readability?

A

Long line lengths, very small point sizes, and extreme raggedness, widows, and orphans.

31
Q

To use variation and contrast to aid reading…

A

…use a pull quote, an image, an initial cap or drop initial, and/or color.

32
Q

What are some ways to achieve emphasis with an entire composition using typography?

A

Isolation, placement, scale, and contrast.

33
Q

What are some ways to achieve emphasis in text type?

A

Size, color, boldface, and italics.

34
Q

How can you improve legibility?

A

Select typefaces for x-height, open counters, modest stroke contrast, and simple shapes.

35
Q

What should you keep in mind when designing for voice or brand?

A

Typeface should be appropriate for the brand and any display typeface should support the logo, not fight with it for attention.

36
Q

How can you include variety in your text type?

A

Use a family, extended family, or super family as that will offer a variety of weights and widths.

37
Q

Case Study: Balthazar Restaurant

A

Design, even the typography, should communicate something about the brand. Be thorough, weave the design into every aspect of the brand. Do allow for variety, though.

38
Q

Case Study: Minneapolis Institute of Art

A

Bear in mind how design will translate through various outputs and plan for versatility.