środa, 22 grudnia 2010

Rules of DTP: Lesson 6: Line Length

If you can't see this email, click here

About.com


Lesson 6: Line Length
Jacci Howard Bear
From Jacci Howard Bear, your Guide to Desktop Publishing

How Long is That Line?
Desktop publishing often uses formulas to calculate the ideal size, height, width, length, resolution, or other characteristic of an image or some aspect of a layout.

Formulas don't necessarily provide hard and fast numbers but they do offer a suitable range to shoot for. With experience you'll learn how to adjust them for your specific needs or you may find you can forgo the calculations entirely. But for right now, follow the formulas for best results.

Balance Line Length with Type Size
Almost any reasonable line length will work in a design if combined with the right size font. The trick is to find the right combination.


Pages in this Lesson
1: Line Length Formulas

2: Examples and Bottomline

3: Assignment

Tips, Trivia, Tidbits
Point Me to the Picas
One of the line length formulas in today's lesson references a unit of measurement that you may not recognize: picas. You may never have to actually use pica measurements but they can be a useful alternative to inches and fractions of inches. A pica is a typesetting unit of measurement commonly used for measuring lines of type. One pica equals 12 points. There are 6 picas to an inch. Although points and picas will be covered in a future intermediate class, if you want to get a headstart, go ahead and Plunge into Picas

Previous 3 Lessons in this Class
Lesson 3: Number of Fonts

Lesson 4: Text Alignment

Lesson 5: Centered Text


This email is written by:
Jacci Howard Bear
Desktop Publishing Guide
Email Me | My Blog | My Forum
 
Missing a lesson? Click here.

About U. is our collection of free online courses designed to help you learn a new skill, solve a problem, get something done, or just learn more about your world. Sign up now, and we will email you lessons on a daily or weekly basis.
You are receiving this email because you subscribed to the About.com 'Rules of DTP' email. If you wish to unsubscribe, please click here.

About respects your privacy: Our Privacy Policy

Contact Information:
249 West 17th Street
New York, NY, 10011

© 2010 About.com
 

Advertisement

0 komentarze:

Prześlij komentarz