May 15-16 :: Click Link for assignment >
(That means put them away!)
C: Voice Level 2 (only the people next to you can hear you and no shouting across the room)
H: Ask your team, elbow partner or raise hand
A: Work on the assignment
M: Stay in your assigned seat
P: Work till assignment is completed
S: Finishing your work
A font is the design of letters and contains their style details.
When you buy a font online you are buying a digital file that you must install on your computer. You can see it best as a small piece of software that will tell you how the letters should look and print.
A lot of times you will an offering a complete family! Sounds great, but what is it? When you are using regular fonts such as Myriad on your computer, you are actually using a font family. If you type in Microsoft Word some text you can easily change it into:
Italic
Bold
Bold Italic
All these variations are different fonts and together they make up a font family.
A typeface refers to what you see, a font refers to what you use. You may have heard the analogy that if a typeface is a song, the font is the mp3. The font is the digital file with a very specific set of values, including weight, style, and width used to create text in a certain style, while the typeface is the design or look that is shared by these fonts!
Possibly with the exception of color, the typeface styles used in a design have a greater impact on the way a user perceives that design than virtually any other individual design element.
There are five basic classifications of typefaces: serif, sans serif, script, monospaced, and display.
Serif typefaces include a slight projection finishing off the strokes of its letterforms (called serifs).
Examples: Times, Palatino, Slab Serif, Bodoni, Typewriter
Sans serif (sans means without) typefaced do not include any projections at the end of the strokes of its letterforms.
Examples: Helvetica, Myriad, Arial, Open Sans
Script typefaces are based on the fluid strokes of handwriting, and can range from formal to very casual. They are suitable for display use.
Types of Script Typefaces:
Formal (Flowing loops and flourishes)
Casual (brush like appearance)
Calligraphic (Emulates hand-lettering)
Blackletter (Formal, strong contrast strokes)
Handwriting (Casual, mimics modern handwriting)
Monospaced typefaces are non-proportional...every letter takes up the same amount of horizontal space on the page or screen. There are serif and sans serif varieties.
Example: Courier New
Display typefaces vary widely in their appearance, and include both practical and novelty fonts suitable for headlines and titles.
The basic building block in typesetting is a glyph—a letter, numeral, or symbol. Now, let’s look at the structural anatomy of each character, and the nuances that make up each character and glyph.
There are a few ways to measure and specify the size of type, depending on where it’s being used and viewed.
Point and Pica are common measures of unit for typography.
Alignment refers to the positioning of text within the page, whether print or digital. Unjustified alignment styles include flush left, flush right, centered; justified alignment refers to a block text that’s been spaced to align along both left and right margins.
At the sentence level, spacing gets more detailed. The placement of words and individual characters can affect legibility, syntax, and overall clarity to the text and the reader experience.
Yep! Good typography can help your reader devote less attention to the mechanics of reading and more attention to your message. Conversely, bad typography can distract your reader and undermine your message.
Some websites try to impersonate safe websites...Make sure you go to the right site BEFORE downloading ANYTHING!
WHAT ARE WE LEARNING: Fonts, fonts, fonts!
WHY IS IT IMPORTANT: A font is the design of letters and contains their style details. When you buy or download a font online you are gaining a digital file that you must install on your computer. You can see it best as a small piece of software that will tell you how the letters should look and print.
HOW WILL MY TEACHER KNOW WHAT I LEARNED: You will practice drawing different and stylized letters showing the resemblance of the letter!
Pick ONE letter (capital or lower case)
In each box draw the letter in a different way
BE CREATIVE!!!!
You may visit www.dafont.com for inspiration!
Pick a category!
Under PREVIEW...type the letter (lower OR uppercase...or both!) you will be drawing 100 times...click SUBMIT!
You now should see the example of THAT letter in many different fonts!
You can even make your own interpretation of a font! (just make sure it resembles the letter chosen!)
Don't worry we will work on these tomorrow also!
100 Points possible! Due SEPTEMBER 18!!!
1 point per square...each being different! (100 Points)
TOTAL: 100 POINTS!!!
EACH SQUARE MUST BE DIFFERENT!
Ctrl+Alt+Delete then select SIGN OFF!