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Typography Master: Learning the art of mixing and matching brochure fonts
- By charen smith
- Published 07/14/2009
- Advertising
- Unrated
charen smith
Charen Smith writes articles about Internet Marketing. She has an extensive knowledge and experience when it comes to business strategies, techniques and business solutions.
View all articles by charen smithTypography Master: Learning the art of mixing and matching brochure fonts
One of the major elements in brochure printing and design is the
typography. You always want to have a good combination of font styles
in your brochures so that they work well with your images and theme.
Good font combinations make your color brochures look more complete and
more appealing to readers. That is why it is important to have a good
set of working fonts already decided, especially when you print
brochures online so that the design looks as one coherent concept when
it is sent to the printers.
In this article, we will give you a few tips on how to mix and match
your fonts for brochure printing. This should guide you on how and
where to choose font styles to improve your brochure designs for the
better.
Using font collections – The first and simplest thing that you may want
to do is to download or acquire certain font collections. There are
various font collections or font families that are available for
download over the Internet. These font families or collections are just
basically individual font styles that are stylistically related to each
other. While they may have distinct key differences, they have a few
fundamental design similarities that make them work well with each
other. Using font collections or font families in a brochure design is
a good way to keep the typography designs for the brochure coherent. It
keeps everything looking like it was from the same theme, albeit with
little differences. Since most of these collections already compliment
each other, you won't even need to worry if the mix of fonts is bad or
good. Everything should click into place since the fonts are already
related.
Matching era types – Another good guideline in choosing different
Style classification – Finally, if “family matching” and “era matching” can't establish what you want for your typographic combinations, then you can just classify your fonts according to broad styles. For example, you can just divide your font styles into categories like “simple”, “brush script”, “thematic” and “creative.” By using font styles that are only located in one such category, you can more or less have a good combination of brochure fonts that look like they belong together. Of course that classification can be dependent on your taste and opinions, but more or less it should be a good guide.
Good! Hopefully that helps a lot in your task of matching your fonts for brochure printing. Just use the suggestions above when you can, and your font combinations should be good enough for booklet printing. Good Luck!
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