The first image “Dreams in Color” by Tre Seals uses a modern serif with bold and all capital to ensure viewers can see the announcement. the second image is ” EXTRA BOLD a feminist inclusive anti-racist nonbinary field guide for graphic designers” by Ellen Lupton, Farah Kafei, Jennifer Tobias, Josh A. Halsted, Kaleena Sales, Leslie Xia, Valentina Vergara uses San Serif geometric with extreme boldness with also a 3d effect. the image “Centered: People and Ideas Diversifying Design” by Kaleena Sales uses serif with all capital and bold but the part were it says “people and ideas diversifying design” is hard to read since the words are alittle sloppy because i couldnt read designed because the way the d was shaped.
KEY INFO
Professor
Beth Tondreau (Mary-Elizabeth)
Email
mtondreau@citytech.cuny.edu
Office Hours
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 11:00am to 12:00pm, Pearl-116 (after class).
Course description
A foundation course in typography with emphasis on using type in industry-related applications from print to interactive. Students will be introduced to principles of type design and terminology
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Ursula C. Schwerin Library
New York City College of Technology, C.U.N.Y
300 Jay Street, Library Building - 4th Floor
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Acknowledgments
This course is based on the following course(s):
I would say Centered, although collaged in look, is more Sans Serif than Serif. Do you think the “D”s are intentionally less easy to read?