Alan Kitching's A-Z of Letterpress

Alan Kitching's A-Z of Letterpress

Author: Alan Kitching

Publisher: Laurence King Publishing

Published: 2015-04-28

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781780674810

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A must for letterpress enthusiasts and graphic designers, this is a covetable showcase of Alan Kitching's font collection. Each page has been carefully created by Alan Kitching in collaboration with Angus Hyland, making this book a work of art in its own right. Presented as an A to Z, each letter is interspersed with complete alphabets giving the reader access to a large range of fonts to reference in their own work.


Get Impressed!

Get Impressed!

Author: Wang Shaoqiang

Publisher: Hoaki

Published: 2021-06-08

Total Pages: 240

ISBN-13: 9788417656379

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An in-depth overview on the world of letterpress: history, examples, designers and everything there is to know about the renewed interest in movable types.


The Stories of English

The Stories of English

Author: David Crystal

Publisher: Abrams

Published: 2005-09-06

Total Pages: 453

ISBN-13: 1468306170

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A groundbreaking history of worldwide English in all its dialects, differences, and linguistic delights: “Informative . . . distinctive . . . a spirited celebration.” —The Guardian In this “well-informed and appealing” work (Publishers Weekly), David Crystal puts aside the usual focus on “standard” English, and instead provides a startlingly original view of where the richness, creativity, and diversity of the language truly lies—in the accents and dialects of nonstandard English users all over the world. Whatever their regional, social, or ethnic background, each group has a story worth telling, whether it is in Scotland or Somerset, South Africa or Singapore. He reminds us that for several hundred wonderful years, there was no such thing as “incorrect” English—and traces the evolution of the language from a few thousand Anglo-Saxons to the 1.5 billion people who speak it today. Moving from Beowulf to Chaucer to Shakespeare to Dickens and the present day, Crystal puts regional speech and writing at center stage, giving a sense of the social realities behind the development of English. This significant shift in perspective enables us to understand for the first time the importance of everyday, previously marginalized, voices in our language—and provides an argument too for the way English should be taught in the future. “A work of impeccable scholarship [that] could easily serve as a standard textbook for students of linguistics, but Mr. Crystal, reaching out to a more general audience, recognizes that even the most avid reader might flinch at the sections on Old Norse grammatical influence. Cleverly, he has sprinkled the book with little digressions, set apart in boxes, that address historical mysteries, strange loanwords, interesting etymologies and the like.” —The New York Times “Learned and often provocative . . . demonstrates repeatedly that common conceptions about language are often historically inaccurate—split infinitives bothered no one until recently (likewise sentence-ending prepositions).” —Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “Simply the best introductory history of the English language family that we have. The plan of the book is ingenious, the writing lively, the exposition clear, and the scholarly standard uncompromisingly high.” —J.M. Coetzee, winner of the Nobel Prize in Literature


The Little Book of Typographic Ornament

The Little Book of Typographic Ornament

Author: David Jury

Publisher: Laurence King Publishing

Published: 2015-09-22

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13: 9781780675893

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This little book contains a beautiful and varied collection of typographic ornaments sourced from specimen books of type foundries, dating from 1700. David Jury explains how the need for typographic ornaments arose and developed, and sets them in their historical context. The chapters cover natural forms; geometric forms; rules and borders; wreaths, borders and scrolls; and pictorial ornaments. The last chapter charts the rise of the graphic designer over the last century, and how modern designers are now reinterpreting these typographic ornaments into new forms of art. The Little Book of Typographic Ornament will be an invaluable reference for graphic designers, as well as providing a source of copyright-free images.


The Itinerant Printer

The Itinerant Printer

Author: Chris Fritton

Publisher:

Published: 2018

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 9780692103029

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Part travel diary, part cultural anthropology, part philosophical musing, part poetic digression, The Itinerant Printer book is a series of interconnected yet independent vignettes that tell the story of two and a half years on the road visiting letterpress shops throughout America & Canada. The large-format, hardcover book comprises over 300 pages and over 1,500 photos from the 2015-17 journey. This is the ultimate index of this printing adventure, the culmination of all the miles, all the ink, all the paper, all the type, and the blood, sweat, and tears.


Communicate

Communicate

Author: David Crowley

Publisher: Yale University Press

Published: 2004-01-01

Total Pages: 264

ISBN-13: 030010684X

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A unique look at how popular music and culture have influenced the evolution of British design.


The Cambridge Companion to Handel

The Cambridge Companion to Handel

Author: Donald Burrows

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 1997-12-04

Total Pages: 372

ISBN-13: 9780521456135

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A Companion to one of the principal creative figures in Baroque music.


Reinventing Print

Reinventing Print

Author: David Jury

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2018-07-12

Total Pages: 446

ISBN-13: 1474262716

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With the rise of digital technology as a design tool and its acceptance as simply part of the tool chest for today's design studios, there has been a re-evaluation and return to exploring pre-digital typography. Design studios no longer flaunt their digital hardware, in fact quite the opposite. This attitudinal change toward digital technology has coincided with a growing fascination and re-evaluation of those pre-digital skills and processes that had been considered in recent years to be irrelevant. Mapping the rise of digital technology and examining the infinite possibilities it offers and the profound cultural and technical influence it has had in all aspects of visual communication. This text also focuses on our current post-digital age, in which the technology itself has become sufficiently common-place for us to fully recognize what it excels at and what it does less well. Reinventing Print focuses on those skills and processes which have been re-appropriated and irreverently liberated by a new generation of typographers, designers, and artists, raised with digital technology in their pockets and forever at their fingertips. In this post-digital age, traditional typographic craft is new, different and therefore exciting, potent and culturally subversive.