CategoriesOfType PDF
CategoriesOfType PDF
CategoriesOfType PDF
ofType
There are many thousands of different typefaces available right now, and
many more are being created every day. Most faces, though, can be dropped
into one of the six categories mentioned below. Before you try to become
conscious of the contrasts in type, you should become aware of the similarities
between broad groups of type designs, because it is the similarities that
cause the conflicts in type combinations. The purpose of this chapter is to
make you more aware of the details of letterforms. In the following chapter
I'll launch into combining them.
Of course, you will find hundreds of faces that don't fit neatly into any
category. We could make several hundred different categories for the
varieties in type - don't worry about it. The point is just to start looking at
type more closely and clearly.
Oldstyle
Modern
Slab serif
Sans serif
EfP~t
~ecorative-/~CLUD/~G GRUWGYf
. DESIGNING WITH TYPE
Oldstyle
Typefaces created in the oldstyle category are based on the handlettering
of scribes-you can imagine a wedge-tipped pen held in the hand.
Oldstyles always have serifs (see the call-out below) and the serifs of
lowercase letters are always at an angle (the angle of the pen). Because of
that pen, all the curved strokes in the letterforms have a transition from
thick to thin, technically called the "thick/thin transition:' This contrast
in the stroke is relatively moderate, meaning it goes from kind-of-thin
to kind-of-thicker. If you draw a line through the thinnest parts of the
curved strokes, the line is diagonal. This is called the stress- oldstyle
type has a diagonal stress.
Serif (pronounced
"sair iff," not
"suh reef")
Dia gonal Serifs on low ercase
01 ty1eme~: : e:ld"Yl'
S
Modern
Oldstyle faces replicated the humanist pen stokes. But as history marched
on, the structure of type changed. Type has trends and succumbs to
lifestyle and cultural changes, just like hairdos, clothes, architecture,
or language. In the 1700S, smoother paper, more sophisticated printing
techniques, and a general increase in mechanical devices led to type
becoming more mechanical also. New typefaces no longer followed
the pen in hand. Modern typefaces have serifs, but the serifs are now
horizontal instead of slanted, and they are very thin. Like a steel bridge,
the structure is severe, with a radical thick/ thin transition, or contrast,
in the strokes. There is no evidence of the slant of the pen; the stress is
perfectly vertical. Moderns tend to have a cold, elegant look.
Midi rn 80'oo;'.."rfo.,,",,.'
Slab serif
Along with the industrial revolution came a new concept: advertising.
At first, advertisers took modern typefaces and made the thicks thicker.
You've seen posters with type like that-from a distance, all you see are
vertical lines, like a fence. The obvious solution to this problem was
to thicken the entire letterform. Slab serifs have little or no thick/thin
transition.
This category of type is sometimes called Clarendon, because the typeface
Clarendon (shown below) is the epitome of this style. They are also
called Egyptian because they became popular during the Egyptomania
craze in Western civilization; many typefaces in this category were given
Egyptian names so they would sell (Memphis, Cairo, Scarab) .
~lab 8 i
rif
Clarendon
Very little or no thick/ thin transition .
or contrast. in the stro kes
Clarendon Memphis
New Century Schoolbook
Silica Regular, Light, Black
Many of the slab serifs that have a slight thick/thin contrast (such as
Clarendon or New Century Schoolbook) are very high on the readability
scale, meaning they can easily be used in extensive text. They present an
overall darker page than oldstyles, though, because their strokes are thicker
and relatively monoweight. Slab serifs are often used in children's books
because of their clean, straightforward look.
TEN CATEGORIES OF TYPE I I
Sans serif
The word "sans" means "without" (in French), so sans serif typefaces are
those without serifs on the ends of the strokes. The idea of removing the
serifs was a rather late development in the evolution of type and didn't
become wildly successful until the early part of the twentieth century.
Also see the following page for important information on sans serif.
~a s serif
No thick / thin transition
in the strokes
Franklin Gothic
Most sans serifs are monoweight, as shown on the preceding page. A very
few, however, have a slight thick/thin transition. Below is an example of
Optima, a sans serif with a stress. Faces like Optima are very difficult to
combine on a page with other type- they have similarities with serif faces
in the thick/thin strokes, and they have similariti es with sans serifs in
the lack of serifs. Be very careful when working with a sans like this.
Sans serif
Optima is on exceptionall!:J beautiful t!:Jpeface, but !:Jou
Optima
MAK ES YO U T HI N K ABOUT
YOUR IM MORTA LIT Y
Script
The script category includes all those typefaces that appear to have been
handlettered with a calligraphy pen or brush, or sometimes with a pencil
or technical pen . This category could easily be broken down into scripts
that connect, scripts that don't connect, scripts that look like hand
printing, scripts that emulate traditional calligraphic styles, and so on .
But for our purposes we are going to lump them all into one pot.
l)'Ile es
Decorative
Decorative fonts are easy to identify -if the thought of reading an entire
book in that font makes you wanna throw up, you can probably put it in
the decorative pot . Decorative fonts are great - they're fun, distinctive,
easy to use, oftentimes cheaper, and there is a font for any ""him you
wish to express. Of course, simply because they are so distinctive, their
use is limited.
ToJa~'SKm j g/dy
is jUst
03 yesterJaY'snuf
that /la/J its ~rou nJ.
Wisdo m someti mes be nefit s fro m the
Be conscious
Oldstyle
Slab serif
Diggle Riggle
ABC 0 ABC u
Figgle Biggle
ABC D A B t 0
Miggle Tiggle
ABC D ABC D
Notice th e huge differences between all the HgH Letters l It's too much fun.
I1I DESIGNING WITH TYPE
Summary
I can't stress enough how important it is that you become conscious of
these broad categories of type. As you work through the next chapter,
samples of the categories. Cut them out of any printed material you
can find. Do you see any patterns developing within a broad category?
Go ahead and make subsets, such as oldstyle typefaces that have small
x-heights and tall descenders (see the example below). Or scripts that
are really more like hand printing than cursive handwriting. Or extended
faces and condensed faces (see below). It is this visual awareness of the
letterforms that will give you the power to create interesting, provocative,