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The Seven Contrasts of TypeOCAD University, Graphic Design 2 Text copyright © 2010 - 2013 Valerie Schein Design and layout copyright © 2010 - 2013 Daniel Francavilla Photos and Images from other sources are used for educational purposes only.All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in any retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
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contrasts7
the seven contrasts of type07
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The Seven Contrasts of Type
Copyright © 2010 - 2013
First published in 2010 by:
Ontario College of Art & Design, Graphic Design 2
Text copyright © 2010 - 2013 Valerie Schein
Design and layout copyright © 2010 - 2013 Daniel Francavilla
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in any retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission in writing from the publisher.
Printed and bound in Canada.
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Communication and expression are always affected by contrast. With greater contrast, comes greater clarity. The readability becomes relative through proper use. Contrast supplies the viewer with a path to follow. A visually expressive map of typography allows for comprehension. High contrast commands attention and generates direction. Low con- trast is assigned to supportive information and is applied to word or text shapes, h are of secondary and tertiary importance.
The control of type on the page, gives the reader a hierarchy of importance and a sense of expression.
A successful graphic designer will guide the reader through the page using words and col-umns of type as value shapes. He or she carefully scrutinizes the proportion and arrangement of lights and darks in a composition. Clear and concise use of value distribution will increase emotional impact. A composition that employs eighty-percent black has a different expression than one that employs eighty percent white.
This book demonstrates that careful use of con-trast will greatly enhance the communicative use of type as a visual form, in an effort to expand and clarify typographic principles.
There are seven contrasts in type
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In order to be truly
happy you have
to stand for something
To move forward you have to
give back– Oprah Winfrey
than yourself. larger
In order to be truly
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Size is the first and most basic form of typographic contrast.
By changing the font size, the viewers eye is immediately drawn to the content. Words or letters set in the same style of type maintain the relationship of the letter to the background and you create a physical enlargement of the pattern ABA. What is the first thing you see on the opposite page?
In reviewing the quotation, the eye is immedi-ately drawn to larger: Through contrast, you are lead to the word “larger” and the remainder of the statement. The font used for the letter-ing is the same, allowing the viewer to remain undistracted and permit the size contrast to control and lead the eye.
The relative sizes of things can be adjusted for the purposes of creating a perspective illusion, exaggerating comparative apparent attributes as a message or metaphor, or simply to achieve a balanced layout in terms of the distribution, mass, and space.
01 contrast | size
Bigger isn’t always better
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Be who you are and say what you feel
because those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind
– Dr. Seuss
02 contrast | weight
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Weight refers to the perceived mass created by the typeface’s stroke and counters. Using weight easily communicates meaning as well as creating rhythm on the page. Selecting a typeface with several families, makes it easy for the designer to control hierarchy inside a composition without risking the sense of harmony. Priorities can be structured as the weight increases or decreases from the focal point.
Weight is often used to create emphasis, also called focus – causing text of an image to seem more important than others. Creating a bal-anced series of emphases is critical to creating a good overall composition: too many emphases
is chaotic, too few is boring. When the eye is not directed where to look, it tends to just look away. In any layout, a maximum of 3 weights is recommended.
In reviewing the quotation, the eye is im-mediately drawn to “are” and “feel”. Through contrast, you are lead to “don’t matter” and “don’t mind” and finally the remainder of the statement. The viewer almost hears the empha-sis allowing the full meaning of statement to communicate, control and lead the eye.
Watch your weight
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Design is not just what it LOOKS like and FEELS like Design is how it WORKS– Steve Jobs
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Form refers to the distinction between upper case letters and its lowercase equivalent. These forms not only compliment each other, but the letters themselves have now have ability to express a different context.
Contrasting uppercase against lowercase depicts formality against casual. Uppercase letters start sentences or are often used as Acronyms. Too many cap forms and there is loss in legibility so use it sparingly. Working
with form allows some freedom with design, as layout need not be changed to draw attention to a piece of text of the same point size and leading.
In reviewing the quotation, the eye reads through, but takes note of the word “WORKS”. As a visual cue, the letterform contrast awakens the importance of a specific word or words.
How important is the form?
03 contrast | form
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A st r ucture
b e c o m e s
architectural
and not sculptural
when its elements
no longer have their
justification in nature
– Guillaume Apollinaire
04 contrast | structure
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The use of structure involves contrasting the thicks and thins of type. The roman letter and the italic counterpart are a common method. A true italic is measured at 12 to 15 degrees less upright than it’s counterpart. Typefaces are purposely designed with variations in structure so that letterforms compliment each other and give the designer a clear advantage when distinguishing textual priority.
To contrast structure you can also contrast different families and achieve distinct visual differences between thicks and thins.
The quotation demonstrates how emphasis can be controlled. The word “architectural” contrasts with “sculptural” and by doing this, the structure change is not only like increasing or decreasing the volume, but changes the very quality and tone of the voice to suit the expression.
Adding structure
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salvation-Frank Lloyd Wright
ideaan isbyimagination
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Texture is how the type appears as a single unit on the page – creating a grey value. This texture is derived from the letterforms, their rhythm, density and how they are arranged letter to let-ter, word to word and line to line on the page. Texture can be compared to fabric – the type is equal to the threads that form it. Texture also calls to our sense of touch so the viewer can be spoken to on two levels.
By altering type’s visual darkness, you alter the space it occupies. With variations in light, dark, dense, and volumous, the texture is keyed to the brain’s function to identify visual stimuli and the viewer’s experience is used to tell them where the eye should travel next.
Touchable texture
05contrast | texture
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The whole world, as we
experience it visually, comes to us through the mystic realm of color– Hans Hofmann
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Colour alters the scale of relationship between similar letterforms. A typographic colour change allows a designer to highlight structure and invig-orate a page. A letterform’s shape and value are more important in determining it’s spatial depth.
The tonal values of the colours can be used to create the illusion of size difference and the per-ceptual difference among colours like red, blue or green can play a dramatic role in typography.
Rich spatial perceptions can be achieved through varying colour intensities and allows the designer to separate information as well as creating visual interest.
Notice how in the quotation, colour is used to emphasis priority words, at different tints depending on their importance.
Colourful creations
0306 contrast | colour
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If you don’t know where
you are going, any road will take you there
– Le
wis
Car
roll
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Directional contrast is a great way to prompt the viewer to take in a quick emotion or message viewpoint without interrupting the information the viewer has read or will read. As an efficient use of space, it opens up the opportunity for texture shifts and size shifts.
The viewer’s eye is like water. Once it has entered the picture plane it will seek the course of least resistance. Left to its own devices, the eye is happy to move around, seeking the easi-est route – their conventional reading direction.
In general, images dominated with strong verticals and horizontals have a more formal
quality compared with images dominated by diagonals (slanted lines, triangles) or orbicular-ity (sweeping curves, spirals) creating a feeling of motion or dynamism.
By using direction, the designer can provide strong pathways for the eye to adhere to, sweeping through the prime areas of focus and moving along, but not falling outside the edge of the picture plane. If the designer has control, the viewer will feel that they are “compelled” from the image.
Where are you headed?
07contrast | direction
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The Seven Contrasts of TypeText by Valerie Schein
Design and Layout by Daniel Francavilla
Copyright © 2010 - 2013
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