| Typesetting 101: Basic principles of book design typesetting |
| Written by Fiona Raven | ||||||||||||||||
| Friday, 09 March 2007 | ||||||||||||||||
Book Typesetting: How a book is typesetYou and your book designer have created an outstanding design for your interior pages, and now your book is ready for typesetting. The irony of excellent typesetting is that no one will notice it! Your reader will find it smooth traveling from cover to cover. How exactly is a book typeset?Preparing the text
Flowing text into your interior page designTypesetting pages individuallyModern page-layout software will typeset text to an extent, but it has some limitations. Each page in your book must be examined separately for the following:
Kerning titlesEach title or chapter heading is checked for awkward character combinations. Because every letter is shaped differently, some fit together better than others. Adjusting the space between two letters is called "kerning." For example, the beginning of the word "illustrator" can look squished in some typefaces and need more space than normal. Some other combinations which often need kerning are VA, FI and To. Typesetting—invisible book designAs you can see, your book designer spends a lot of time making sure your readers don't notice anything about your typesetting. That's the beauty of good typesetting—no one notices it!
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| Last Updated ( Tuesday, 17 April 2007 ) | ||||||||||||||||