Text Formatting ⇒ Vintage kerning
- Johannes_B
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Re: Vintage kerning
Do you have examples/scans of what you are trying to reproduce? Which year are they from?
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- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2009 11:38 pm
Vintage kerning
What do you not like; the interword spacing?
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- Posts: 132
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- Johannes_B
- Site Moderator
- Posts: 4182
- Joined: Thu Nov 01, 2012 4:08 pm
Vintage kerning
Some of the letters, especially
y
have the tail below an adjacent letter. Is this the result of your doing?-
- Posts: 132
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2009 11:38 pm
Re: Vintage kerning
- Attachments
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- w.pdf
- Original kerning
- (11.03 KiB) Downloaded 372 times
- Johannes_B
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- Joined: Thu Nov 01, 2012 4:08 pm
Vintage kerning
To be honest, ianal (i am not a lawyer) but you should check before getting in some kind of trouble.
I don't have the very best eye with regards of typography. Making both pdfs full screen, closing my eyes, shuffling the pdfs, i still can spot which one is the one with bad kerning. It just looks odd.
The first image you posted today looks a bit awful. With time in practical use, certain individual letters get cracks and stuff. That makes the output a bit crunchy.
May i ask, what exactly your goal is? I cannot really help you in achieving it, but i am interested.
You might also be interested in Typesetting before TeX and Computers
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Re: Vintage kerning
What I want is something that (as far as kerning is concerned) might have been hand-set and looks hand-set.
- Johannes_B
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Vintage kerning
Well, hand set is a thing. If you are really into your job and want to get the best output for you clients, you adjust every little bit by hand.
If you are a bit cheaper, do the default stuff. I.e. no adjustments, use it out of the box.
The scratched types visible in Loeb, 1914 seem to be a prrof of the second part.
But please, this is just my personal opinion.
Have you read about the Gutenberg bible? Gutenberg had an incredible amount of letters including kerning pairs. That was really hand-made stuff.