Chapter layout

Discover Pinterest’s best ideas and inspiration for Chapter layout. Get inspired and try out new things.
885 people searched this
·
Last updated 2d
Manuscript grid, uses a drop cap that drops 4 lines instead of the 3 that I have seen most of lately. Also part of a quote. Like the hierarchy used for the chapter number, title and subtitle(date) and also the graphic element, a line which just breaks it a little more. Have used different weights and sizes of a typeface for the titles, which is a serif along with the bodycopy which is also serif, fits with the language used in the text and the overall theme Manuscript Grid, Book Formatting, Indesign Layout, Book Chapter, Contents Layout, Book Layouts, Traditional Books, Page Layout Design, Drop Cap

Manuscript grid, uses a drop cap that drops 4 lines instead of the 3 that I have seen most of lately. Also part of a quote. Like the hierarchy used for the chapter number, title and subtitle(date) and also the graphic element, a line which just breaks it a little more. Have used different weights and sizes of a typeface for the titles, which is a serif along with the bodycopy which is also serif, fits with the language used in the text and the overall theme

723
Timeless approach to a chapter opener. Maybe have an image overprinted on the number Chapter Opener Design Layout, Book Chapter Design Layout, Chapter Design Layout, Chapter Opener Design, Chapter Design Ideas, Chapter Layout, Book Chapter Design, Chapter Opener, Chapter Design

Hofstede Design + Development is a graphic design and web development studio based in Melbourne, Australia. We are recognised for our distinct typographic responses. In our discourse, methods and outcomes, we pursue clarity and authenticity over complexity and pretence.

1.7k
Jonnyisaacson-blackgirlsinformation-graphicdesign-itsnicethat-02 Chapter Design Layout, Chapter Page Design, Chapter Layout, Layout Editoriale, Studying Illustration, Chapter Design, Typography Magazine, Editorial Design Layout, Zine Design

“I got into design kind of by accident,” explains London-based graphic designer Jonathan Isaacson. Despite studying illustration at Brighton, Jonathan admits he became far more inspired by the work his friends were producing across the discipline bridge in graphic design, an area which appeared like “it was as much about the idea as it was about the final outcome,” he tells It’s Nice That.

411

Related interests