Typotheque

Designing Type — book review

As a teacher of type design and typography I have always wished to have a book, which I could recommend to my students without hesitation, and so I was excited to receive Karen Cheng’s Designing Type. As the author remarks in her introduction, there are simply very few books that comprehensively explain the type design process.

In the blurb, the 232 page book promises to focus on ‘processes and issues of designing type,’ but the design process is summarized in two pages, while the remaining 230 pages provide a detailed analysis of individual letters. Those isolated characters are measured, dissected and superimposed, creating a useful comparison of the possibilities of the Latin character set, but there is little discussion of how the individual letters relate to each other in combination. In fact, despite the fact that book is extensively illustrated, there are no illustrations of the complete character sets. Cheng focuses on terminology and the miniscule details of type but there is no suggestion of the fundamentals of type creation such as the difference between written and printed type, or more general principles of letter construction. Cursive (italic) construction of letters is entirely omitted, as are the influences of various generating tools. If Cheng’s book had been called A Micro-Analysis of Popular Latin Fonts, then I would have expected the useful educational reference book that it is. But if its ambition is to reveal principles of typeface construction, the book ought to present methodology for creating type, which it does not. In the meantime, I’ll keep hoping for a type design book to recommend to the students.

Designing Type — book review by Peter Biľak

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3 comments


Rainey, 19 Feb 2010
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Stephen Zapf-von Hesse, 22 May 2006
In the meantime... "In the meantime, I’ll keep hoping for a type design book to recommend to the students."

In the meantime, *I*'ll keep waiting for the book that *you* write, Peter. I'm sure it'll be a good one.
Thomas Lowry, 17 May 2006
re: I felt similar about the book but I am in no way a type designer. Just a student who would like to get started. After working on some a font last summer as an excercise and being confused when it came to things like spacing etc, I was also excited to pick this book up. As a whole I had many of the same problems with the book. However for someone like myself the last little bit on some of the spacing/kerning guidelines and such seemed like they could be useful; now, not having designed a complete typeface before I really don't know how accurate or useful the information is but hopefully I can put it to the test soon.
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Author: Peter Biľak
Category: Reviews
Year: 2006
267 words
ISBN: 0300111509
Originally written for Print magazine, and published in their summer 2006 issue.
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