Cecil, thanks for asking this question. Even though the answers
may/will be subjective, it is quite likely that there are people here
who have given some thought to font choice. I agree with previous
responses that reading a book on typography would certainly be
helpful. Nevertheless, I am
Dear all,
In light of the question on fonts I have wondered how ConTeXt deals with this
Monotype Baskerville 11/12.5 pt
or
Monotype 11 on 12 point Bembo
that I see at the beginning of books.
Are there commands to achieve this. There probably are but I haven't recognised
them.
Thanks,
Hi,
Graphic designers describe in this way the font-size and linespacing.
So one can do things like this:
\definedfont[Baskerville at 11pt]\setupinterlinespace[line=12.5pt]...
Willi
On 16 Mar 2011, at 13:50, Charles Doherty wrote:
Dear all,
In light of the question on fonts I have
Ah Willi,
It is quite clear now. I did think along those lines but wasn't sure.
Thank you very much,
Charlie
On 16 Mar 2011, at 12:59, Willi Egger wrote:
Hi,
Graphic designers describe in this way the font-size and linespacing.
So one can do things like this:
Am 2011-03-16 um 13:59 schrieb Willi Egger:
Graphic designers describe in this way the font-size and linespacing.
So one can do things like this:
\definedfont[Baskerville at 11pt]\setupinterlinespace[line=12.5pt]...
But use bp instead of pt - TeX's point is smaller than a
PostScript
Thank you Hraban,
It is falling into place now.
Charlie
On 16 Mar 2011, at 13:18, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
But use bp instead of pt - TeX's point is smaller than a PostScript
point, we had that recently...
see also http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_(typography)
Hi,
I recently started to dabble in typography. There's a lot to learn
there. The proposed book sure is a good start, but there are also lots
of online resources (e.g. www.typophile.com - their forum is filled with
interesting discussions about your question).
What I've learned in the last
On 16 mrt. 2011, at 17:51, Christian meta...@gmx.de wrote:
And finally: Your budget. Are you willing to buy fonts? That would probably
come in at 30-60 bucks (but that's nothing if you are serious aboutt your
book). If not, some of the above can be obtained for free (still being
Good point. Metadata of the font says its licene can be found here:
http://www.adobe.com/type/legal.html
Be sure to read it.
It's probably best to check with Adobe before using it commercially or
just buying it. But at least you can try out the font in context, which
is already a plus. Other
At the moment I use for my ebook:
\usetypescript[palatino][texnansi]
\setupbodyfont[palatino,rm,12pt]
Does not look to bad, but layout is not my forte. So if people have tips
about the fonts to use, I like to hear them.
Do you use other fonts when using a printed book?
--
Cecil Westerhof
On Mon 14 Mar 2011, Cecil Westerhof wrote:
At the moment I use for my ebook:
\usetypescript[palatino][texnansi]
\setupbodyfont[palatino,rm,12pt]
Does not look to bad, but layout is not my forte. So if people have
tips about the fonts to use, I like to hear them.
A discussion about ‘best
* Cecil Westerhof cldwester...@gmail.com [2011-03-14 12:44]:
At the moment I use for my ebook:
\usetypescript[palatino][texnansi]
\setupbodyfont[palatino,rm,12pt]
Does not look to bad, but layout is not my forte. So if people have tips
about the fonts to use, I like to hear them.
Do you use
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