Deck 3: Typography
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Deck 3: Typography
1
To ensure readability, use typefaces with larger x-heights.
True
2
What are general typographic design concerns?
Typographic design concerns include the following:
Clarity of visual communication
Appropriate selection of typeface(s) for audience, content, and context
Aesthetics and meaning
What the relationship between type and imagery communicates.
Clarity of visual communication
Appropriate selection of typeface(s) for audience, content, and context
Aesthetics and meaning
What the relationship between type and imagery communicates.
3
General categories of type alignment include which of the following? Select all that apply.
A) Left-aligned: Text aligned to the left margin and ragged or uneven on the right side; it is also called left-justification or flush left\ragged right .
B) Right-aligned: Text aligned to the right margin and ragged or uneven on the left margin; it is also called right-justification or flush right\ragged left .
C) Justified: Text aligned on both the left and right sides.
D) Centered: Lines of type centered on an imaginary central vertical axis.
E) Runaround: Type wraps around an image, photograph, or graphic element; it is also called text wrap .
F) Frame: Type is set around the perimeter of a page.
A) Left-aligned: Text aligned to the left margin and ragged or uneven on the right side; it is also called left-justification or flush left\ragged right .
B) Right-aligned: Text aligned to the right margin and ragged or uneven on the left margin; it is also called right-justification or flush right\ragged left .
C) Justified: Text aligned on both the left and right sides.
D) Centered: Lines of type centered on an imaginary central vertical axis.
E) Runaround: Type wraps around an image, photograph, or graphic element; it is also called text wrap .
F) Frame: Type is set around the perimeter of a page.
A,B,C,D,E
4
What is included in a type family?
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5
To ensure readability, use left-justification or justified text type alignments.
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6
To ensure readability, use all caps for text.
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7
List at least three criteria for selecting a typeface.
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8
Explain the kinds of spatial intervals that occur between letters, between words, and between two lines of type.
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9
How should you go about selecting a typeface to coordinate with an image(s)?
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10
Type and image form specific relationships. List and describe three of the broadest possible relationships.
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11
What is a typeface?
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12
What are the major type classifications?
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13
To ensure readability, break text into manageable chunks.
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