Monday, 22 November 2010

Communication Technology: Widget Type

This is the first attempt at type for a widget. It's relatively standard and does the job, but there is perhaps too much text to make it easily legible, and it appears a little squashed.
This is the second revision. The first thing to note is that I've changed the header to a serif font (Plantagenet Cherokee) to provide some aesthetic contrast.


I've also added a subheading to make it more obvious what the text is about.


The final thing I've done is to choose Thonburi for the body text as one of its properties is relatively generous leading- this makes it much more friendly to the eye when viewed on screen.

Thursday, 18 November 2010

The Times: Layout & Type


The Times looks more like a newspaper than comparable newspaper websites. Although most are similar, this has an explicit link, complete with a border and correct dimensions.

Times New Roman is interestingly used for both body and header text. It gives the paper a rather traditional, Conservative look which suits its target market, but is actually less practical on screen.

I notice that there is increased leading on the headers, and a large amount of space under the image caption to make a clear divide between that and other sections. To reinforce these boundaries, subtle grey lines have been drawn.



Monday, 8 November 2010

Guardian: Capital offenders: the case against uppercase


New York City is right to change the style of its street signs. Good, clear typography DOES NOT NEED TO SHOUT

IT'S OFFICIAL: CAPITAL LETTERS CAN BE DANGEROUS.

At least, that's what the US federal highway administration believes. According to the New York Post:
"Studies have shown that it is harder to read all-caps signs, and those extra milliseconds spent staring away from the road have been shown to increase the likelihood of accidents, particularly among older drivers."
In New York City, this will mean replacing 250,900 street signs with signs that cap up only the initial letter. So BROADWAY will become Broadway. A new font, Clearview, has been developed for the purpose. Cost: $27.6m (although, to put that figure in perspective, 8,000 signs have to be replaced every year for $110 each through normal wear and tear).
Officials argue that the changes will save lives and the city's transportation commissioner, Janette Sadik-Khan, also suggested that the new signs might reflect a kinder, gentler New York. "On the internet, writing in all caps means you are shouting," she said. "Our new signs can quiet down, as well."
Despite hysterical Daily News coverage that said "several" New Yorkers were "outraged" by the change – it quoted three – the paper's own poll showed that two-thirds of the public is behind the switch from capital letters.
It won't surprise regular Guardian readers that I agree with them. TheGuardian style guide has long encouraged the gradual move away from capitals. So do other newspapers and websites, although some venerable style guides are still agonising over whether to lowercase internet and world wide web. (Be assured they will do so, perhaps in time for the 22nd century.)
In part, the switch from capitals reflects a society that is less deferential than in the days when the Manchester Guardian would write something like this: "The CHANCELLOR OF THE EXCHEQUER, Mr LLOYD GEORGE, presented the Naval Estimates to Ministers and Members of the House."
Most readers seem comfortable with a less formal style. A grand total of two people complained about our coverage of the pope's, rather than the Pope's, recent visit to the UK. We did receive a letter last week complaining that calling David Cameron the prime minister, not the Prime Minister (a style we have been following for more than a decade) reflected a "lowering of standards", but such complaints are few.
We need to be ever-vigilant, however, against the capital offenders. Politicians, civil servants and Estate Agents are three groups that remain intent on drowning us all in this alphabet soup. (Yesterday I was presented with a government statement that said: "On the Chancellor's recommendation the Prime Minister has appointed the Secretary of State for Energy and Climate Change to the Public Expenditure Committee ... ")
Capitals do have their uses, of course. As the Urban Dictionary puts it: "Capitalisation is the difference between 'I had to help my uncle Jack off a horse' and 'I had to help my uncle jack off a horse.'"
To return to traffic signs. New York's commendable decision is an echo of one taken in the UK 50 years ago, when the brilliant designers Jock Kinneir and Margaret Calvert, given the task of updating the country's chaotic system of road signs, concluded that "a combination of upper and lowercase letters would be more legible than conventional uppercase lettering". They produced a new font, known as Transport, which they felt would be friendlier and more appealing to British drivers than the stark modernist style used in continental Europe. The classic British road signage that they designed is still in use.