I developed an interest in typography when I wrote a legal brief for the U.S. 
Supreme Court and had to deal with it's very specific typesetting rules. (Did 
you know that 11 point Times New Roman really *isn't* 11 points? It's slightly 
smaller and the Court will not accept a brief written in 11 point Times).

Typographically, layout is more important than font. A bad font well laid out 
will be more readable than a good font badly laid out. In terms of layout, the 
biggest mistake most people make is having text lines too long. With letter 
sized paper (8.5 x 11), I'll set my left and right margins *at least* 1.5 
inches each, leaving text lines of 5.5 inches, which is still too long for 
single spaced text. At that length, I'll double space my text. I set a line of 
11 to 12 point single spaced text set at 5 inches.

As for fonts, I like Linux Libertine G for its extra features (automatic 
ligatures, old-style figures, hanging punctuation). I also like how it matches 
well with its sans-serif companion, Linux Biolinum. I will use Biolinum for 
headings and Libertine for text. Libertine has the same general shape as Times, 
but is much more readable as it is not as condensed as Times. I don't use more 
than one or two fonts for a document and I avoid overemphasis. Regular italics 
works nicely. I never underline anything.

Other readable fonts are Palatino, Century Schoolbook, and some versions of 
Garamond. Sadly, if the reader notices your font, then the font has failed its 
purpose. At most, the reader should notice that your text is easier to read 
than someone else's. If you're using a newer version of Windows, you may have 
Sitka Text. I just discovered this font and absolutely love it. While it was 
designed for on-screen use, it prints nicely on my printer.

Many years ago, I bought an outdated copy of WordPerfect. While I don't use the 
word processor, its CD came bundled with hundreds of really good quality 
Bitstream fonts, which are well worth the cost of the CD. Some of my favorites 
on the Wordperfect CD are Iowan Old Style, Century 731 BT, and New Baskerville 
BT.

If you want to learn more about typography than you'll ever need, I recommend, 
"The Elements of Typographic Style," by Robert Bringhurst.

Good luck

Virgil

On 10/11/2016 9:56 AM, Julian Brooks wrote:

Hello again,

Hope this isn't seen as too cheeky...

Does anyone have any templates they'd be willing to share as examples of
decent contemporary layout (for my particular usage, it's a thesis)?

Mines just, well, boring tbh (not far off the LO standard layout, which,
though fine, is just that - somewhat dull and functional.

I don't mean something crazy and snazzy, just a proper solid contemporary
layout by someone who's into graphic design, typography and such stuff,
with a keen eye.

Or, does anyone have any links to, or pointers for, a good place to look
that not only provides examples but clear instructions on spacings,
heights, etc.?

Font-wise, I've been making use of Linux Libertine for many years but even
that seems a bit staid these days (if ethically sound:).

S'cuse the ennui,

Julian




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