ty·pog·ra·phy Pronunciation Key - Show Spelled Pronunciation [
tahy-pog-ruh-fee]
Pronunciation Key - noun
- The art or process of printing with type.
- The work of setting and arranging types and of printing from them.
- The general character or appearance of printed matter.
Typography is the art, craft and techniques of type design, modifying type glyphs,
and arranging type. Type glyphs (characters) are created and modified using a variety
of illustration techniques. The arrangement of type is the selection of typefaces,
point size, line length, leading (line spacing) and letter spacing.
Typography is performed by typesetters, compositors, typographers, graphic artists,
art directors, and clerical workers. Until the Digital Age, typography was a specialized
occupation. Digitization opened up typography to new generations of visual designers
and lay users.
In traditional typography, text is composed to create a readable, coherent, and
visually satisfying whole that works invisibly, without the awareness of the reader.
Even distribution with a minimum of distractions and anomalies are aimed at producing
clarity and transparency.
Choice of font(s) is perhaps the primary aspect of text typography—prose fiction,
non-fiction, editorial, educational, religious, scientific, spiritual and commercial
writing all have differing characteristics and requirements. For historic material,
established text typefaces are frequently chosen according to a scheme of historical
genre acquired by a long process of accretion, with considerable overlap between
historical periods.
Contemporary books are more likely to be set with state-of-the-art seriffed "text
romans" or "book romans" with design values echoing present-day design
arts, which are closely based on traditional models such as those of Nicolas Jenson,
Francesco Griffo (
a punchcutter who created the model for Aldine typefaces),
and Claude Garamond. With their more specialized requirements, newspapers and magazines
rely on compact, tightly-fitted text romans specially designed for the task, which
offer maximum flexibility, readability and efficient use of page space. Sans serif
text fonts are often used for introductory paragraphs, incidental text and whole
short articles. A current fashion is to pair sans serif type for headings with a
high-performance seriffed font of matching style for the text of an article.
The text layout, tone or color of set matter, and the interplay of text with white
space of the page and other graphic elements combine to impart a "feel"
or "resonance" to the subject matter. With printed media typographers
are also concerned with binding margins, paper selection and printing methods.
Typography is modulated by orthography and linguistics, word structures, word frequencies,
morphology, phonetic constructs and linguistic syntax. Typography also is subject
to specific cultural conventions. For example, in French it is customary to insert
a non-breaking space before a colon (:) or semicolon (;) in a sentence, while in
English it is not.