If you feel like being wiped out by a monster wave of digital resources, then surf over to Smashing Magazine. The look is clean and accessible, and the tone is upbeat and practical. The online magazine's motto is: "We smash you with the information that will make your life easier". One of Smashing's signatures is the list: 70 best Photoshop Tutorials, 50 Brilliant Photos, 40 Free Fonts and so on. Compiling such lists is easy enough, but the lists at Smashing generally live up to the hyperbole. The resources listed are good quality and worth exploring. Beware the addictive side of resource hunting: one list inevitably leads to another, and one lifetime is probably not enough to fully exploit your ever-growing personal list of finds.
Like all good Web 2.0 sites, Smashing Magazine encourages user feedback and participation. Many users go on to contribute articles to the site, and guidelines for doing so are prominently displayed. Most of the material is oriented towards web designers, but there is plenty of useful stuff for print designers and those in need of resources for a non-work project.
Read moreBuild it, and they will kern
You've visited all the type vendors and searched in vain. There's nothing that quite matches up with the search image in your head. 'I could do a better job myself!' you cry.
Fortunately for you. Fontshop has recently added an interesting functionality to their website: a typeface constructor. The FontStruct site equips you with an array of basic font shapes that can be moved arround lego-like on an underlying grid to form letters. Although the basic shapes are simple, when used in concert, the results are quite sophisticated. A gallery shows the variety of effects achieved by contributors. Once you have put together your masterpiece (and that might just be an uppercase set of letters, or an extended character set), your typeface can be saved as a truetype font and used out in the 'real' world. Over 160,000 people have signed up with FontStruct and 7,000 typefaces have been saved for public use. At the very least, the site is a worthy educational tool for those interested in typefaces, and reinforces the notion of an underlying grid over which the letterforms are arranged/organised. Oh, and it is completely free.
Read moreImages for peanuts
Typing ‘free images’ into Google is an interesting and sometimes dispiriting exercise. Some of the sites listed are ad-laden, spyware infested monstrosities. Others are merely royalty-free, which is not free at all. There are however quite a few legitimate and useable sources of free images worth considering, of which the following are a small sample.
1. Wikimedia Commons: from the folks at Wikipedia, a fairly clunky search engine and a rather arbitrary system of classification. All of the images are in the public domain.
2. Flickr: A monster photo sharing website with literally billions of images. Some are just happy snaps, but others top flight professional images. The search engine is organised around tags and extremely easy to use. Many are copyrighted, while other images (100,000,000 at last count) carry the Creative Commons licensing system. This allows for use by others in certain circumstances dicated by the creator.
3. Mayang’s free textures: Wood, paint, metal and more. Useful as backgrounds, licensed for unrestricted use.
4. Library of Congress Prints and Photographs catalogue: over a million images held by the Library of Congress, many of which are in the public domain. The search engine is old-school librarian – heavy on text, light on thumbnails.
5. Picture Australia: contains a vast archive of historical images relating to Australia. The images belong to various Australian institutions. Some are still under copyright, but many are in the public domain. Picture Australia maintains a tagged category at Flickr, on an experimental basis.
6. Easy Stock Photos: a nuts and bolts free image site. The quality is moderate and the range limited, but it is easy to use and not infested with malware.
For further searches, try: http://meta.wikimedia.org/wiki/Help:Public_domain_image_resources
For Chameleon Print Design’s list of pay and free sites, go to http://www.chameleondesign.com.au/image-libraries/
Note: Please read the image use policies of the site from which you are downloading the image. Some allow for private use only, others restrict modification of the image in question and some don’t care what you do with it.
Read moreOpen Office: like Microsoft, only free
For years, PC users used Microsoft Office programs as a default option, and helped make Bill Gates very rich. Many PCs came with Office pre-installed,making it the path of least resistance. Despite their flaws, programs such as MS Word, Excel and Powerpoint went on to dominate the PC world.
In recent years a real option has taken shape, and it is free. Funded by Sun Microsystems, the Open Office suite includes the following elements (with the Microsoft equivalent after the colon).
Read more- Writer: Word
- Calc: Excel
- Impress: Powerpoint
- Base: Access
- Draw: Visio
- Math: Equation Editor
The Colour of Type
At the simplest level, readability is about not getting between the reader and the content. According to Robert Bringhurst, "Typography with anything to say ... aspires to a kind of statuesque transparency." While magazine and advertising design is often about display typefaces, novelty and high impact, book design is much more self-effacing. Book designers aim for an intelligent understanding of the content they are typesetting, and type selection that aids that content.
There are a few rough rules of thumb for creating readable text. Serifed typefaces are generally easier to read than unserifed faces. Ornate, fussy typefaces should be reserved for headings/display type only. Generous interline spacing (120% of type height is often cited as an ideal) makes type easier to read, but only up to a point. 'Rivers' of white space running vertically through a poorly set body of text make it harder to read. Judicious hyphenation gives text a more even 'tone', but excessive hyphenation is distracting. Line lengths of approximately 10-15 words are ideal. A type size of between 10 and 12 points will work for most readers, ranging up to 16pts for those with some vision impairment. Narrow margins leave no space for a reader's hands, and paper thickness and colour also play a role in enhancing readability, not to mention lighting conditions. On monitors, screen contrast and brightness, refresh rates, type size and distance from the screen are factors.
Once the key factors are satisfied, fine-tuning readability is sometimes more a matter of aesthetics than any strict metric. Some typefaces just 'feel' better with a certain kind of content, and it is difficult to spell out the exact reason. Taste is a notoriously difficult concept to explain.
Professional level typesetting packages such as Quark or InDesign are much better at setting blocks of text than word processing packages. That said, observing the basic rules of readability will always yield a better result, whatever the package. Every word processing program gives its users some access to type controls, both at a character and a paragraph level. The typesetting program InDesign calculates the placement of words and hyphenation on a whole of paragraph basis, attempting to create an even type 'tone'.
The apparently simple act of reading is anything but. Letters are human constructions with a complex and conditional history. They are not necessarily optimal, and are subject to continuous reinvention, for aesthetic as well as functional purposes. Changes in printing technology and the advent of computers and the Internet have all precipitated waves of type innovation. Type designers spend a great deal of time designing letter forms, harmonising those forms through a whole family of weights and styles, then setting every possible combination of kerning pairs, ligatures, special characters and letters from other alphabets. All through this exacting process they exercise their informed judgement, and their knowledge of related and historical typefaces, and current developments in the field. It is very far from being a science, as precise as their measurements might be. There are so many variables in setting type for readability that there are probably infinite variations that will both satisfy the basic demands of readability and those of proportions and aesthetics. There will never be a utopian 'perfect' typeface, as one could always posit an improvement, or a circumstance might arise that demands a different approach.
Summary of Points to consider:
- type size
- type colour
- type clarity and contrast
- the ratio of the x-height to the overall letter height
- letterspacing
- kerning
- line length
- average word length
- frequency of hyphenation
- justified or set ragged left
- number of and space between columns
- leading (interline spacing)
- paper colour and thickness
- margins
- paper dimensions
If I Said You Had a Beautiful Body Type
The type nerd website Typographica recently released its list of notable typefaces released in 2008. Given the biblical flood of digital typefaces released every day, attempting to highlight quality over dreck is probably a worthwhile exercise.
People who care about typefaces may have strong and often eccentric opinions on some matters, but are surprisingly unanimous about high quality faces. There is often a moment of almost religious intensity for typophiles when a beautiful typeface swims into view. Sometimes the deciding factor is the way the face sets in body text, or a particularly graceful letter, or the relation of one letter to another, or an evocation of a particular epoch or event.
Although type design, like music, is highly influenced by precedent and fashion, the best typefaces have a completely distinctive personality. If a designer does not respect that personality, the typeface will not work for her.
Read moreFolders go global
There are plenty of ways of storing files online and accessing them remotely. Some come via email services, or image sharing sites. Other users configure their own server, use space on their isp's server, or access their work server remotely. For sheer simplicity and ease of use, however, DropBox stands out. After a very straightforward installation process (for Mac or PC) a DropBox folder appears in your drive tree (you get to choose where). The folder can be managed like any other folder on your computer: dragging files in, creating new folders, opening files and so on. The folder can be a little sluggish with larger files, which is not surprising -- it is online. The folder can be shared with others, or opened by yourself from any other location. No more mucking around with ftp or servers, or signing up with another service just to use their online storage. Storage up to 2Gb is free, with paid accounts kicking in after that.
Read moreColour Lovers
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Individuals really matter on the Internet. They improve open source software, edit wikipedia, help SETI find extraterrestrial signals, produce podcasts, blog, twitter, aggregate news, break news, leak official documents and more. Blogger Glenn Reynolds calls it the 'Army of Davids' effect.
ColourLovers has generated its own passionate Army of Davids, all focussing on an area dear to many designers: colour. ColourLovers contributors add patterns and colour palettes to 'their' website in dizzying profusion. Their offerings are then rated by users and ranked according to those ratings.
The site packs in a lot of visual information without losing clarity and offers a generous resource for anyone seeking colour ideas and interesting patterns/textures. The patterns are available at high resolution and the palettes can be exported to a number of image editing packages. With a constant stream of new colours and patterns, and a certain air of competition between contributors, the site is always fresh and interesting.
ColourLovers exemplifies the new generation of websites that are striving to meld the profit motive (the site takes advertising and sells merchandise) with a very open attitude towards anyone with relevant material to contribute.
Read moreDummies for books
Awaiting the return of a book from the printers is a nerve-racking time. Authors worry about errors, page ordering mistakes, the cover design and the overall feel of the work. In the end, a book is an artefact as well as a collation of words and ideas. If the book looks flimsy, poorly bound, the cover curls up and the paper type feels wrong, disaster may be in the offing. What many authors don't know is that printers are happy to make up a 'dummy' of their book before printing. The dummy replicates the paper type, weight, cover stock, binding style and page extent, but is completely blank. It is not a proof -- that comes later in the process. A book dummy allows the author or publisher to assess the feel and quality of the book before printing it. In conjunction with the printers proof and thorough checking, it is a means of ensuring the quality and accuracy of the whole production. In addition, your leftover book dummy will make a dandy notebook.
Read moreOn the Same Page
Planning documents such as magazines, handbooks and newsletters can be daunting. Many editors use a form of flat plan to map out the document, showing how one page relates to another, allocating advertising space and the flow of articles. Flat plans can be set out in programs such as Word, Excel and even InDesign.
A new option has recently become available -- the online flat plan. Online flat plans enable a large number of people to access the same file whatever their location, and to quickly map the building blocks of a long document. These document planning solutions are a prime example of web 2.0 at its best -- innovative, customisable, updateable and easy to use. Intelligent Flat Plan charges on a per page basis, and the slightly less fully featured Blink Plan charges a monthly rate.
Read moreISBNs, CIP and You
Any author intending to sell their books via bookstores or online will need an ISBN/EAN 13 number, from which the barcode can be derived and added to the cover. Adding Cataloguing in Publication (CiP) data to the imprint page of the book is also a very good idea. For more information, click here.
Read moreLittle Green Men
We've been listening for aliens for some time now. SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) is conducted by various privately funded organisations (the US Government having pulled out of the area some years ago). The SETI at Home initiative enlists spare processing time on millions of home computers via the Internet, processing signal data recorded by radio telescopes.
Read more
So far SETI has not yielded any positive results, though astronomers are still trying. In the meantime, the people at the SETI institute conduct public outreach and education campaigns. One of their efforts is the stellar podcast Are We Alone, hosted by astronomer Seth Shostak and producer Molly Bentley.
Seth and Molly have set themselves a wide scientific brief. Sometimes they deal with issues directly related to the possibility of and development of life elsewhere, and the difficulties involved with detection and communication, while other episodes cover skepticism, science education and the scientific method. Practising scientists are interviewed, including Nobel laureates and other luminaries.
Both presenters possess an attractive lightness of touch. Humour is a consistent and successful feature of the show, with Molly usually playing the straight woman to Seth's joker. The tone is approachable, non-elitist and beneath the constant stream of jokes, skits and nutty voice-overs, passionate about science and the possibilities of life.
Clear Thinking
Most amateur podcasts are ... amateur. Long pauses, hesitant delivery, bad sound and worse material -- like community TV without the funding. The Skeptics Guide to the Universe is one of the few exceptions to this pattern. Presented by Dr Steven Novella, a neurologist working at Yale University, Skeptics Guide targets the armies of con-artists, psychics, faith healers and creationists that prey so ceaselessly on the credulous. Dr Novella is ably backed up a by a team of four co-presenters. Their constant cross-talk and banter during the show is one of its strengths. Skeptics Guide does not confine itself to debunking cranks, but also interviews scientists, educators and fellow skeptics, giving the show a consistently positive and forward-looking tone. Unreason is everywhere, but this highly entertaining show celebrates the human capacity to sort out truth from untruth. The Skeptics also maintain the appropriately titled blog, Rogue's Gallery.
Read moreHDR - Too Much Reality?
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Traditional film-based photography involves a great deal of compromise, much of it arising from the limitations of the equipment. Digital photography removes or diminishes many these limitations. For example, digital photography is extremely good at rendering tonal range and colour. High dynamic range imaging (HDR) takes this capability to extremes. HDR involves combining differently exposed images of the same scene. The resultant image retains useful information from all of the exposure settings. The idea is not new, but digital photography has made HDR accessible to vast numbers of amateur and professional photographers. And they trying it out en masse -- a search for HDR images on Flickr yields over one million results.
HDR images are unsettling. The level of detail is almost overwhelming, and the colours just too rich. Where the human eye usually sees only partial detail, HDR picks up everything. One can imagine a superhero with the capacity to see in HDR. Mere mortals may prefer the ordinary world of muted colours and imperfect perception.
Software is available for those wishing to try their hand at HDR, some of it free.
Read moreMac Voices
Apple Mac users might only make up a small percentage of computer users, but they are a vocal minority. There are websites entirely devoted to guessing at the next device out of Cupertino, others that aim to ease the transition to Macland for lapsed PC users and others that chronicle the far reaches of Mac culture. New users will never lack for tips, tricks and a vast range of resources. Mac-oriented Podcast listeners have access to audio offerings ranging from besotted to the slightly skeptical.
Apple Keynotes: The High Church of Apple Love, when Prophet Steve comes down from the Silicon Mount and offers up the next device. Cleverly staged, emotional and deeply weird for the non-Mac listener. Unfortunately, Mr Jobs is ill and while competent, replacement speakers lack his proselytising charm.
Apple Quick Tips: shiny young Mac Evangelists present very short and reasonably useful basic tips on aspects of Mac Use, invariably ending their spiel with a chirpy and slightly irritating 'Wanna Learn More?'
Mac Tips Daily: Presented with enthusiasm and not completely polished, but ranging further and going deeper than Apple Quick Tips.
Mac Cast: Intelligent, amiable and engaging, Mac Cast is a sprawling podcast that packs in Mac news, gossip, new releases and some excellent and informative interviews. The presenter (Adam Christianson) really does his research, and manages to preserve an air of independence and constructive criticism.
Read morePDFs for free: online & on your computer
Portable Document Format (PDF) files are a common feature of the modern Internet. Generated by Adobe's Acrobat software, PDF files carry with them all image and font information, and do not have to be reconstructed by the receiving computer. The format was devised by Adobe as a way of bringing the invariant nature of print on paper to the variable world of computer-based documents. By giving away the Acrobat Reader as a free download, Adobe ensured that the PDF format spread widely and has become an unofficial Internet and corporate standard. Graphic designers also use the format when finalising a job, embedding all image, typeface and colour information in a single PDF file and optimising it for printer workflows.
However, creating a PDF is not free. At the time of writing, users can purchase the full family of Acrobat software for AUD$555. This allows them to create, edit, add comments to and authorise others to comment on, PDFs. Users of Microsoft Word, Powerpoint, Excel, Photoshop, InDesign, Quark Xpress and a host of other packages are able to either 'print' to PDF, or create a postscript file that can be then 'distilled'.
For businesses that only occasionally create or edit PDFs, the cost of this software is quite high. Adobe is aware of this part of the market, and offers an online PDF creator for approx USD$9.99 a month or USD$100 per year. However in the everything-should-be-free world of Web 2.0, numerous alternatives have arisen that cost absolutely nothing.
DoPDF is a small download available on Windows. Once installed, a PDF option appears in the print options box of all the programs from which you might want to create PDFs.
CutePDF is a stripped down piece of freeware which installs as a PDF option available when printing a document.
PDF online allows users to upload a file, enter their email address and have the completed PDF file emailed back to them. Simple, and no software installation required.
Primo Online does the same thing as PDF online, also for free.
Open Office (the free open source suite of programs that emulate the Microsoft family), allow users to save files as PDFs as a native capability.
There are other fee-based packages such as Nitro PDF that offer a rather more extensive set of features, and are still cheaper than the full version of Adobe Acrobat.
Read moreGalaxy Zoo
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The scientists behind Galaxy Zoo 2 want to use your pattern recognition skills to help them classify galaxies. They call it 'citizen astronomy' and participants page through images of galaxies taken by an automated telescope, answering a series of questions about the appearance of a particular galaxy. The human eye is better than software at sorting these images into appropriate categories. Well over 100,000 people have participated and 50 million categorisations have been made (each galaxy is viewed by several people, making the classification much more reliable). Results so far have helped change thinking about the abundance of certain kinds of galaxies and have also resulted in the discovery of a very odd structure.
Read moreTake me to your Masters
Multiple Master (MM) typefaces were an interesting experiment in digital typography. Created by Adobe, MMs dispensed with the usual system of font weights (bold, semibold, regular, bold, etc) in favour of smooth variation in the axes of weight, width and optical size. Many more variations were therefore available than could be achieved with a standard family of typefaces.
Adobe released several attractive and useful typefaces in this format: Cronos (see image below), Bickham Script, Chapparal, Myriad, Minion, Ocean Sans and others. However, the sheer time and expense involved in creating MM typefaces meant that other type designers were slow to come on board, and eventually Adobe allowed the format to lapse in favour of Open Type (in the context of the bigger debate surrounding the harmonisation of True Type and Type 1). Adobe has released a collection of 'equivalent' Opentype typefaces with a slew of additional characters, but they don't fully recapture the range of subtle variations that characterised the MM format.
Read moreCataloguing in Publication (CiP)
Cataloguing in Publication (CiP) is a free service offered to publishers by the National Library of Australia to provide a bibliographic record for a book before it is published. When the book is published the CiP data is printed on the reverse side of the title page. The CiP data is also included in the National Bibliographic Database (NBD) available on Kinetica, Australia’s Library Network. Visit www.nla.gov.au/services/CIP.html for further information.
Read moreClipart you don't really own...
Is it ever OK to use Microsoft clipart for commercial purposes?
Leaving aside aesthetic issues, the answer is ... not really. Microsoft and other companies have immense legal muscle and will often act to protect their intellectual property. In general, Microsoft has deemed that non-commercial use of their clipart is permissible, provided the clipart comes from a legal copy of a Microsoft program or was downloaded from Microsoft’s online clipart site (office.microsoft.com/clipart) by a Microsoft user. Clipart may not be on-sold.
According to Mr Gates' lawyers:
The following guidelines apply to the use of clip art:
1. You may use clip art in your school assignments and projects.
2. You may use clip art in your church brochure.
3. You may use clip art for personal, noncommercial uses.
4. You may not use clip art to advertise your business.
5. You may not use clip art to create a company logo.
6. You may not use clip art to illustrate the chapters of a book.
Given the sheer amount of hideous Microsoft stick figures in business brochures and the like, one might think that particular horse has well and truly bolted.
Fortunately, better clipart is available in many places on the web, some free and others rather less so. There is even a website devoted to storing the vector logos of the world's major brands.
Read more