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Owned by Kristen

Typographic North

89 members • Free

Learn how to design and publish readable and beautiful books and publications –without hiring a costly design agency.

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40 contributions to Typographic North
Good typography is almost invisible.
You read a text from the beginning to the end. There are no abrupt interruptions, no distractions to stop the flow. It just works. When a text fails to meet this standard, we are looking at poor typography. When the line length is so long, we have to move our heads. When the line spacing is too narrow, we read the same line twice. When the typeface is sub-optimal, we have a hard time differentiating the individual letterforms. These small details often lie in the hands of a typographer or a graphic designer. However, this work is often neglected and misinformed. That’s why you sometimes find reading challenging. By paying attention to the principles of good typography, you can transform how people read and experience your content. Consider diving deeper into this subject. Each insight will help you create more engaging, accessible, and effective designs.
0 likes • 24d
@Victoria Ruth Hello, welcome. Please write an introduction in the comments of the introduction post here
2 likes • 1d
@Mike Gagnon Hah! Let’s change that! Side note: you can use Comic Sans to great effect 🥳
How a Font Helped Catch Out Someone At Court
Enjoyed this funny little font related video https://www.instagram.com/reel/DNswPcdUEEo/?igsh=cG5ta3U1a3h5YjU5
How a Font Helped Catch Out Someone At Court
1 like • 1d
Haha, busted! I always smile for myself when I see historical films using modern typefaces as well. 🙂‍↔️
Hello!
I'm Wesley. I have a longstanding love-affair with books, but less with type, so I thought I'd join you to see if I could get some education on the topic. My favourite font is Papyrus. I would never use it, but there's something that resonates deeply with me. The writing I self-publish is all written in Markdown, translated to LaTeX and then compiled. Purists will probably be horrified, but I find it easy to get above average results with very close to no time spent on formatting.
Hello!
1 like • 3d
Welcome to the community! That is an interesting way to go about it. I haven't worked with LaTeX myself, so I'm not sure how horrified I should be, hehe. On the topic of Papyrus, on the other hand, I know exactly how horrified I should be. No, you're welcome to enjoy it :-) I hope you'll get something out of this group going forward.
What publishing software do you use?
There are lots of different people in this group, some are more writers than designers, others are more illustrators than typographers. Many interests, joined in a common appreciation for letterforms. For those who use the computer to prepare texts for publishing – either for print or digital – what software do you use THE MOST? I'm sure we all use various tools from time to time, but the poll only allows one choice – your primary tool in your work. And, please add context in the comments!
Poll
5 members have voted
1 like • 3d
@Wesley Penner Great. It's so hard to typeset advanced math in desktop publishing software. I've often just inserted screenshots of formulas.
1 like • 3d
Sorry, I just realised LaTeX is much more than equations and formulas. When I've worked with mathematicians on their reports, they send me documents with LaTeX commands, so I thought that's what it was all about. But I see it's useful for all sorts of text formatting. Interesting!
Introducing: the typographic classroom
Hello! I'm happy to announce the classroom – an evolving place for more structured content. We'll publish mini courses, resources and other valuable insights toward the Typographic North there. For now, we start by introducing this group and encouraging engagement in the community. If it has been a while and you feel like reintroducing yourself, you're welcome to write a post in the new 'introductions' category. Please state - your name - your location - your favourite typeface After having done so, please find two other introductions and comment on them. This way, you’ll get to say ‘hi’ and spark new conversations. See you in the comments!
1 like • 3d
@Wesley Penner Thank you, and welcome to the group! It's a work in progress.
1 like • 3d
@Wesley Penner And yes, I'm building a few courses. I have many plans, and I guess I should stop perfecting them and just build. Soon! Cheers for the topic-post suggestion, I'll consider implementing it somehow.
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Kristen Hus
5
358points to level up
@kristen-hus-7208
I design books & publications – and write calm copy. I'm exploring typography, writing, language and aesthetics.

Active 10h ago
Joined Jan 29, 2024
Stockholm
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