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Showing posts from January, 1997

Trooping the Colour, Spooling the Print: Computers publishing from Glum to Glitters

It is astonishing to see what information technology hs done to the typesetting industry. In the past three decades, technological advancement in the area of typography and composition has revolutionized the graphic art and prepress industry segments. Claude Garamond, the sixteenth century French punch cutter who established the first type foundry probably had little or no idea what the young industry would become in the ages to come. Type is the personality of the printed word. Typography can convey great individuality. Competent use of type has given structure and emphasis to text, and helped present it in a way that is comfortable for the reader. Poor use of type can confuse the reader by conveying a mood that conflict with the meaning of the text. More especially, bad use of type can simply be distractive. The use of type in composition and graphic design has witnessed outstanding advancement by the introduction of desktop computing. At this point, a retrospective overview of the t...