Dictionary Definition
User Contributed Dictionary
Noun
- The particular design of some type. A font, or a font family.
- The surface of type which inked, or the impression it makes.
Synonyms
- (typography) face
Translations
font family
- Czech: rodina písma
- French: fonte de caractères
- Swedish: typsnitt
Extensive Definition
In typography, a typeface is a
set of one or more fonts
designed with stylistic unity, each comprising a coordinated set of
glyphs. A typeface usually
comprises an alphabet
of letters, numerals,
and punctuation
marks; it may also include ideograms and symbols, or consist entirely of
them, for example, mathematical or map-making
symbols. The term typeface is frequently conflated with font; the two terms had more
clearly differentiated meanings before the advent of desktop
publishing. The current distinction between font and typeface
is that a font designates a specific member of a type family such
as roman, boldface, or
italic
type, while typeface designates a consistent visual appearance
or style which can be a "family" or related set of fonts. For
example, a given typeface such as Arial may include
roman, bold, and italic fonts. In the metal type era, a font also
meant a specific point size, but with digital scalable outline
fonts this distinction is no longer valid, as a single font may be
scaled to any size.
The art and craft of designing typefaces is
called type design.
Designers of typefaces are called type
designers, and often typographers. In digital
typography, type designers are also known as font
developers or font designers.
The size of typefaces and fonts is traditionally measured in
points;
point has been defined differently at different times, but now the
most popular is the Desktop Publishing point of 1/72 in. When
specified in typographic sizes (points, kyus), the height of an
‘em-square’, an invisible box which is typically a bit larger than
the distance from the tallest ascender to the lowest descender, is
scaled to equal the specified size. For example, when setting
Helvetica at 12 point, the em square defined in the Helvetica font
is scaled to 12 points or 1/6 of an inch. Yet no particular element
of 12-point Helvetica need measure exactly 12 points.
Frequently measurement in non-typographic units
(feet, inches, meters) will be of the ‘Cap-height’, the height of
the capital letters. Font size is also commonly measured in
millimeters (mm) and
qs (a quarter of a millimeter, kyu in romanized Japanese) and
inches.
Font, typeface and type family
In professional typography the term typeface is not interchangeable with the word font, which was historically defined as a given alphabet and its associated characters in a single size. For example, 8-point Caslon Italic was one font, and 10-point Caslon Italic was another. Historically, fonts came in specific sizes determining the size of characters, and in quantities of sorts or number of each letter provided. The design of characters in a font took into account all these factors.As the range of typeface designs increased and
requirements of publishers broadened over the centuries, fonts of
specific weight (blackness or lightness) and stylistic
variants—most commonly "regular" or roman as
distinct to italic, as
well as condensed—have led to font families, collections
of closely related typeface designs that can include hundreds of
styles. A font family is typically a group of related fonts which
vary only in weight, orientation, width, etc, but not design. For
example, Times is a font family, whereas Times Roman, Times Italic
and Times Bold are individual fonts making up the Times family.
Font families typically include several fonts, though some, such as
Helvetica, may consist of dozens of fonts. Helvetica,
Times, and
Courier
are examples of three widely distributed typefaces.
History
Type foundries have cast fonts in lead alloys from the 1450s until
the present, although wood
served as the material for some large fonts called wood type
during the 19th century, particularly in the United
States. In the 1890s the mechanization of typesetting allowed
automated casting of fonts on the fly as lines of type in the size
and length needed. This was known as continuous casting, and
remained profitable and widespread until its demise in the 1970s.
The first machine of this type was the Linotype, invented
by Ottmar
Mergenthaler.
During a brief transitional period (c. 1950s
– 1990s), photographic technology, known as phototypesetting,
utilized tiny high-resolution images of individual glyphs on a film
strip (in the form of a film negative, with the letters as clear
areas on an opaque black background). A high-intensity light source
behind the film strip projected the image of each glyph through an
optical system, which focused the desired letter onto the
light-sensitive phototypesetting paper at a specific size and
position. This photographic typesetting process permitted optical
scaling,
allowing designers to produce multiple sizes from a single font,
although physical constraints on the reproduction system used still
required design changes at different sizes—for example,
ink traps and spikes to
allow for spread of ink
encountered in the printing stage. Manually operated
photocomposition systems using fonts on filmstrips allowed fine
kerning between letters
without the physical effort of manual typesetting, and spawned an
enlarged type design industry in the 1960s and 1970s.
The mid-1970s saw all of the major typeface
technologies and all their fonts in use: letterpress, continuous
casting machines, phototypositors, computer-controlled
phototypesetters, and the earliest digital
typesetters—hulking machines with tiny processors and CRT
outputs. From the mid-1980s, as digital typography has grown, users
have almost universally adopted the American spelling font, which
nowadays nearly always means a computer
file containing scalable outline letterforms ("digital font"),
in one of several common formats. Some typefaces, such as Verdana, are
designed primarily for use on computer
screens.
Digital type
Digital fonts store the image of each character either as a bitmap in a bitmap font, or by mathematical description of lines and curves in an outline font, also called a vector font. When an outline font is used, a rasterizing routine (in the application software, operating system or printer) renders the character outlines, interpreting the vector instructions to decide which pixels should be black and which ones white. Rasterization is straightforward at high resolutions such as those used by laser printers and in high-end publishing systems. For computer screens, where each individual pixel can mean the difference between legible and illegible characters, some digital fonts use hinting algorithms to make readable bitmaps at small sizes.Digital fonts may also contain data representing
the metrics used for composition, including kerning pairs,
component creation data for accented characters, glyph substitution
rules for Arabic typography and for connecting script faces, and
for simple everyday ligatures
like fl. Common font formats include METAFONT, PostScript
Type
1, TrueType and
OpenType.
Applications using these font formats, including the rasterizers,
appear in Microsoft and Apple Computer operating
systems, Adobe
Systems products and those of several other companies. Digital
fonts are created with font editors such as FontForge,
Fontlab's
TypeTool, FontLab Studio, Fontographer, or AsiaFont Studio.
Typeface anatomy
Typographers have developed a comprehensive vocabulary for describing the many aspects of typefaces and typography. Some vocabulary applies only to a subset of all scripts. Serifs, for example, are a purely decorative characteristic of typefaces used for European scripts, whereas the glyphs used in Arabic or East Asian scripts have characteristics (such as stroke width) that may be similar in some respects but cannot reasonably be called serifs and may not be purely decorative.Serifs
Typefaces can be divided into two main categories: serif and sans serif. Serifs comprise the small features at the end of strokes within letters. The printing industry refers to typeface without serifs as sans serif (from French sans: "without"), or as grotesque (or, in German, grotesk).Great variety exists among both serif and sans
serif typefaces. Both groups contain faces designed for setting
large amounts of body text, and others intended primarily as
decorative. The presence or absence of serifs forms is only one of
many factors to consider when choosing a typeface.
Typefaces with serifs are often considered easier
to read in long passages than those without. Studies on the matter
are ambiguous, suggesting that most of this effect is due to the
greater familiarity of serif typefaces. As a general rule, printed
works such as newspapers and books almost always use serif
typefaces, at least for the text body. Web sites do not have to
specify a font and can simply respect the browser settings of the
user. But of those web sites that do specify a font, most use
modern sans serif fonts, because it is commonly believed that, in
contrast to the case for printed material, sans serif fonts are
easier than serif fonts to read on the low-resolution computer
screen.
Proportion
A proportional typeface displays glyphs using
varying widths, while a non-proportional or fixed-width or monospaced
typeface uses fixed glyph widths.
Most people generally find proportional typefaces
nicer-looking and easier to read, and thus they appear more
commonly in professionally published printed material. For the same
reason, GUI
computer applications (such as word
processors and web browsers)
typically use proportional fonts. However, many proportional fonts
contain fixed-width figures so that columns of numbers stay
aligned.
Monospaced typefaces function better for some
purposes because their glyphs line up in neat, regular columns.
Most manually-operated typewriters and text-only
computer displays use monospaced fonts. Most computer programs
which have a text-based interface (terminal
emulators, for example) use only monospace fonts in their
configuration. Most computer
programmers prefer to use monospace fonts while editing
source
code.
ASCII art
usually requires a monospace font for proper viewing. In a web page, the
<tt> </tt> or <pre>
</pre> HTML tag most commonly
specifies non-proportional fonts. In LaTeX, the verbatim
environment uses non-proportional fonts.
Any two lines of text with the same number of
characters in each line in a monospace typeface should display as
equal in width, while the same two lines in a proportional typeface
may have radically different widths. This occurs because wide
glyphs (like those for the letters W, Q, Z, M, D, O, H, and U) use
more space, and narrow glyphs (like those for the characters i, t,
l, and 1) use less space than the average-width glyph when using a
proportional font.
In the publishing industry, editors read manuscripts in fixed-width
fonts for ease of editing, and it is considered discourteous to
submit a manuscript in a proportional font.
Font metrics
Most
scripts share the notion of a baseline:
an imaginary horizontal line on which characters rest. In some
scripts, parts of glyphs lie below the baseline. The descent spans
the distance between the baseline and the lowest descending glyph
in a typeface, and the part of a glyph that descends below the
baseline has the name "descender". Conversely, the
ascent spans the distance between the baseline and the top of the
glyph that reaches farthest from the baseline. The ascent and
descent may or may not include distance added by accents or
diacritical marks.
In the Latin,
Greek and
Cyrillic
(sometimes collectively referred to as LGC) scripts, one can refer
to the distance from the baseline to the top of regular lowercase
glyphs (mean line) as
the x-height, and the
part of a glyph rising above the x-height as the "ascender". The distance from
the baseline to the top of the ascent or a regular uppercase glyphs
(cap line) is also known as the cap height. The height of the
ascender can have a dramatic effect on the readability and
appearance of a font. The ratio between the x-height and the ascent
or cap height often serves to characterize typefaces.
Types of typefaces
Because a plethora of typefaces have been created over the centuries, they are commonly categorized according to their appearance. At the highest level, one can differentiate between serif, sans serif, script, blackletter, ornamental, monospace, and symbol typefaces. Historically, the first European fonts were blackletter, followed by serif, then sans serif and then the other types.Serif typefaces
Serif, or "Roman", typefaces are named for the
features at the ends of their strokes. Times Roman
and Garamond are
common examples of serif typefaces. Serif fonts are probably the
most used class in printed materials, including most books,
newspapers and magazines. Serif fonts are often classified into
three subcategories: Old Style, Transitional, and Modern. Old Style
typefaces are influenced by early Italian lettering design. Though
some argument exists as to whether Transitional fonts exist as a
discrete category among serif fonts, Transitional fonts lie
somewhere between Old Style and Modern style typefaces.
Transitional fonts exhibit a marked increase in the variation of
stroke weight and a more horizontal serif compared to Old Style,
but not as extreme as Modern. Lastly, Modern fonts often exhibit a
bracketed serif and a substantial difference in weight within the
strokes. Examples of these are Times, New Baskerville, and Bodoni,
respectively.
Roman, italic, and oblique are also terms used to
differentiate between upright and italicized variations of a
typeface. The difference between italic and oblique is that the
term italic usually applies to serif faces, where the letter forms
are redesigned.
Sans serif typefaces
Sans serif (lit. without serif) designs appeared
relatively recently in the history of type design. The evolution of
the sans serif font very likely stemmed from the slab serif font.
The earliest slab serif font, "Antique", later renamed "Egyptian",
designed in 1815 by the English typefounder Vincent Figgins was
succeeded one year later by the first sans serif font, created by
William Caslon IV. The evidence of this is clearly shown in the
uniform strokes in the letter forms. Sans serif fonts are commonly
but not exclusively used for display typography such as signage,
headings, and other situations demanding legibility above high
readability. The text on electronic media offers an exception to
print: most web pages and digitized media are laid out in sans
serif typefaces because serifs often detract from readability at
the low resolution of displays.
A well-known and popular sans serif font is
Max
Miedinger's Helvetica,
popularized for desktop publishing by inclusion with Apple
Computer's LaserWriter laserprinter and having been one of the
first readily available digital typefaces. Arial, popularized by
Microsoft, is a widely used sans serif font that is often compared
to and substituted for Helvetica. Other fonts such as Futura,
Gill
Sans, Univers and
Frutiger
have also remained popular over many decades.
Script typefaces
Script typefaces simulate handwriting or calligraphy. They do not
lend themselves to quantities of body text, as
people find them harder to read than many serif and sans-serif
typefaces; they are typically used for logos or invitations.
Examples include Coronet
and Zapfino.
Blackletter typefaces
Blackletter fonts, the earliest typefaces used
with the invention of the printing
press, resemble the blackletter calligraphy of that time. Many
people refer to them as "gothic script". Various forms exist
including textualis,
rotunda,
schwabacher, and
fraktur.
Monospaced typefaces
Monospaced fonts are typefaces in which every glyph is the same width (as opposed to variable-width fonts, where the w and m are wider than most letters, and the i is narrower). The first monospaced typefaces were designed for typewriters, which could only move the same distance forward with each letter typed. Their use continued with early computers, which could only display a single font. Although modern computers can display any desired typeface, monospaced fonts are still important for computer programming, terminal emulation, and for laying out tabulated data in plain text documents. Examples of monospaced typefaces are Courier, Prestige Elite, and Monaco.Ornamental typefaces
Ornamental (also known as "novelty" or sometimes "display") typefaces are used exclusively for decorative purposes, and are not suitable for body text. They have the most distinctive designs of all fonts, and may even incorporate pictures of objects, animals, etc. into the character designs. They usually have very specific characteristics (e.g. evoking the Wild West, Christmas, horror films, etc.) and hence very limited uses. See below for the historical definition of "display typeface".Typefaces based upon non-Roman-alphabet writing systems
A group of decorative typefaces, sometimes called "simulation" typefaces, have been designed that take the form of the Roman alphabet but evoke another writing system. This group includes typefaces designed to appear as Arabic, Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, Chinese, Cyrillic, Devanāgarī, Greek, Hebrew, Katakana, and Thai. There are many caveats to these including unusual key mappings on a standard keyboard, and lack of support for logographic writing systems. These are used largely for the purpose of novelty to make something "appear" foreign, or to implement a symbol, such as π, that is not otherwise available.Symbol typefaces
Symbol, or Dingbat, typefaces consist of symbols
(such as decorative bullets, clock faces, railroad timetable
symbols, CD-index, or TV-channel enclosed numbers) rather than
normal text characters. Examples include Zapf
Dingbats, Sonata,
and Wingdings.
Display typefaces
In the days of letterpress and phototypesetting, many of the most commonly used typefaces were available in a "display face" variation. Display faces were created for best appearance at large "display" sizes (typically 36 points or larger) as might be used for a major headline in a newspaper or on the cover of a book. The main distinction of a display face was the lack of "ink traps", small indentations at the junctions of letter strokes. In smaller point sizes, these ink traps were intended to fill up when the letterpress was over-inked, providing some latitude in press operation while maintaining the intended appearance of the type design. At larger sizes these ink traps are not necessary, so display faces do not have them. Today's digital typefaces are most often used for offset lithography, electrophotographic printing or other processes that are not subject to the ink supply variations of letterpress, so ink traps have largely disappeared from use. This is why display cases are rarely found in the world of digital typography, whereas they were once common in letterpress printing. When digital fonts feature a "display" variation, it is to accommodate stylistic differences that may benefit type used at larger point sizes. Unfortunately, some 20 years plus into the desktop publishing revolution, few typographers with metal foundry type experience are still working, so the misuse of the term "display typeface" as a synonym for "ornamental type" has become widespread.Texts used to demonstrate typefaces
A sentence that uses all of the alphabet (a
pangram), such as
"The
quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog", is often used as a
design aesthetic tool to demonstrate the personality of a
typeface's characters in a setting. For extended settings of
typefaces graphic designers often use nonsense text (commonly
referred to as "greeking"), such as lorem ipsum
or Latin text
such as the beginning of Cicero's In
Catilinam. Greeking is used in typography to determine a
typeface's "colour",
or weight and style, and to demonstrate an overall typographic
aesthetic prior to actual type setting.
Legal aspects
Under United States law, typeface designs are not subject to copyright; however novel and nonobvious typeface designs are subject to protection by design patents. Digital fonts that embody a particular design are often subject to copyright as computer programs. The names of the typefaces can become trademarked. As a result of these various means of legal protection, sometimes the same typeface exists in multiple names and implementations.Some elements of the software engines used to
display fonts on computers have software
patents associated with them. In particular, Apple Inc. has
patented some of the hinting
algorithms for
TrueType, requiring open source
alternatives such as FreeType to use
different algorithms.
Although typeface design is not subject to
copyright in the United States under the 1976 Copyright Act, the
United States District Court for the Northern District of
California in Adobe Systems, Inc. and Emigre, Inc. v. Southern
Software, Inc. and King (No. C95-20710 RMW, N.D. Cal. Jan. 30,
1998http://lw.bna.com/lw/19980303/9520710.htm)
found that there was copyright in the placement of points on a
computer font's outline, i.e., because a given outline can be
expressed in myriad ways, a particular selection and placement of
points has sufficient originality to qualify for copyright.
Many western countries extend copyright
protection to typeface designs. However, this has no impact on
protection in the United States, because all of the
major copyright treaties and agreements to which the U.S. is a
party (such as the
Berne Convention, the
WIPO Copyright Treaty, and
TRIPS) operate under the principle of "national
treatment", under which a country is obligated to provide no
greater or lesser protection to works from other countries than it
provides to domestically produced works.
See also
- ATypI, Association Typographique Internationale
- Calligraphy
- Computer font
- Dingbat
- Expert font
- Font
- Font family (HTML)
- Fontlab
- Font-management program
- HTML
- Intellifont
- List of type designers
- List of typefaces
- List of typographic features
- Samples of display typefaces
- Samples of simulation typefaces
- Sans serif
- Screenfont
- Serif
- Society of Typographic Aficionados
- Type design
- Type Directors Club
- Type foundry
- Typography
- Typographic unit
- Unicode font
References
External links
- comp.fonts FAQ
- Twenty Faces
- ABC typography - Introduction to the most famous typefaces
typeface in Min Nan: Jī-hêng
typeface in Bulgarian: Шрифт
typeface in Czech: Rodina písma
typeface in Danish: Skrifttype
typeface in German: Schriftart
typeface in Modern Greek (1453-):
Γραμματοσειρά
typeface in Spanish: Tipo de letra
typeface in Esperanto: Tiparo
typeface in French: Police d'écriture
typeface in Korean: 글꼴
typeface in Icelandic: Stafagerð
typeface in Italian: Font
typeface in Hebrew: גופן
typeface in Georgian: შრიფტი
typeface in Luxembourgish: Schrëftaart
typeface in Hungarian: Betűkép
typeface in Dutch: Lettertype
typeface in Japanese: 書体
typeface in Norwegian: Font
typeface in Polish: Krój pisma
typeface in Portuguese: Fonte tipográfica
typeface in Russian: Шрифт
typeface in Finnish: Kirjasin
typeface in Swedish: Teckensnitt
typeface in Thai: ไทป์เฟซ
typeface in Ukrainian: Гарнітура
typeface in Chinese: 字体
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
ascender, back, bastard type, beard, belly, bevel, black letter, body, cap, capital, case, counter, descender, em, en, face, fat-faced type, feet, font, groove, italic, letter, ligature, logotype, lower case, majuscule, minuscule, nick, pi, pica, point, print, roman, sans serif, script, shank, shoulder, small cap, small
capital, stamp, stem, type, type body, type class, type
lice, typecase,
typefounders,
typefoundry, upper
case