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TYPEFACE VS FONT HOW TO
Need more info about book design, InDesign, and publishing? Our website, book, videos, and blog cover every aspect of how to design and publish a book, whether you’re already an experienced book designer or a complete novice. Copyright © 2017 Fiona Raven and Glenna Collett. The excerpt above is from Book Design Made Simple, Second Edition, chapter 21, Changing your main typeface, page 132.


Read more: Book design basics » reveals three simple principles. Read more: Why learn InDesign? » explains what you’ll gain by using this great Adobe program. Part IV of Book Design Made Simple offers much more information about typefaces and fonts: a very brief history of typefaces, the parts of uppercase and lowercase letters, how to purchase fonts, and how to use fonts legally. Perhaps it’s understandable that Adobe would use the terms in this way because they used to be in the business of selling fonts. What do you think? Maybe it should say say “typeface” instead: This raises all kinds of questions, doesn’t it? For instance, is Adobe correct in its word usage in this InDesign Paragraph Styles dialog box? you purchase fonts in order to design with a typeface. A font is the delivery system for the typeface, whether it be a computer file or a set of metal type. What’s the difference? A typeface is the design that makes Caslon look different from Helvetica, for instance. The short explanation from Book Design Made Simple follows: Typeface vs font If you can remember the definitions below and try to use them properly from now on, you’ll help educate others. It’s the same: the font-family is Helvetica, but within that are the different variants of weight and size.Typeface vs font: What’s the difference, and who cares? People throw both terms around as if they were the same thing, but they’re not. There were still no typeface families romans were one. In the early 16th century, cursive or italic (named after Italy, where the idea was popularized) type was introduced. Typefaces are sometimes even called a font family, especially in web-development where that’s the class name. When typefaces were first invented, the notion of having a family of type hadn’t occurred to anyone. Another way to look at it is that they’re all a family where the fonts are the different siblings within that family. The typeface is like the album and the fonts are like the songs. This is technically correct, as they are blocks of text within a certain style, but font now refers more to the way the text looks, and not the way it was.

An album and it’s songs are both music by the same person and in the same style, but each song is individual and those songs make up the album. “Each font of a typeface has a specific weight, style, condensation, width, slant, italicization, ornamentation”Ī good analogy to help understand this, is to think of it like songs on an album. These different fonts make up the typeface. For example, a typeface like helvetica is made up of different fonts such as roman, italic, heavy, bold etc. In a nutshell, a typeface is made up of different fonts. “A typeface is a set of one or more fonts each composed of glyphs that share common design features.” While most people use font and typeface interchangeably, and designers will know what they mean whether they use the “correct” terminology or not, as a typographer it’s handy to understand what the difference is. Typefaces and fonts are the main weapons in your typographic arsenal, and as a designer or typographer, it’s important to know the difference. Once you understand what typography is, it’s time to get to know the tools of the trade.
