Typography-Uceed/Ceed: Visual Glossary
Typography-Uceed/Ceed: Visual Glossary
Typography-Uceed/Ceed: Visual Glossary
VISUAL GLOSSARY
Leg
A portion of a letter
that extends
downwards,
attached at one
end and free at the
other.
Arm
A straight or curved
portion of a letter
that extends
upwards or
outwards, attached
at one end and free
at the other
Ear
The stroke that curves downwards and to the right of the lowercase h, m
and n.
Spine
The spine is the main curved stroke inside the upper and lower case S.
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Tail
Stem
The stem is the main vertical stroke in upright characters. When a letter
has no verticals like a capital A or V, the first diagonal stroke is considered
the stem.
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Stroke
Bar
Serif
When a letter doesn’t have a serif, the end of the stroke is called a
terminal.
Bowl
Link
Spur
A spur is a small projection that veers off the main stroke on many capital
G’s
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Kerning
Kerning is the space between two individual letters. It’s used when you
need to move only one letter because it is too far or too close to its
companions. Some typefaces have a strange spacing between the capital
letter and the rest of the word. Kerning helps create a better balance
between letters.
When designers create wordmark logos, they usually control the kerning
from letter to letter, making sure the entire word is perfectly balanced and
polished.
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Tracking
Tracking is the proportional space between all the letters in a body of text.
Being able to change the tracking helps fit more letters in a small space
or spread out letters if they are too tight. Script fonts cannot undergo too
much tracking due to how the ligatures separate and create unbalanced
spaces.
Leading and x-height have a direct effect on how text will look in a
paragraph. There is another measurement we should mention called the
baseline, which is the line on which letters sit horizontally. The bottom of
the x-height of each letter sits on a baseline.
The lower the x-height compared to the cap height, the more white space
there will be between lines. When letters have a higher x-height in
comparison to the cap height, the leading looks more balanced and
ordered.
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Anatomy of a Character
How do you tell one typeface from
another? If you’re trying to distinguish
Helvetica from Times Roman, the
difference is obvious. In other cases,
however – especially between text
designs having similar characteristics –
the differences can be subtle and difficult
for the less–experienced eye to see.
One important step in training your eye
to notice the details that set one design
apart from another is to examine the
anatomy of the characters that make up
our alphabet.
Arm/leg – An upper or lower (horizontal or diagonal) stroke that is attached on one end
and free on the other.
Ascender – The part of a lowercase character (b, d, f, h, k, l, t) that extends above the x-
height.
Bowl – A curved stroke which creates an enclosed space within a character (the space is
then called a counter).
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Cap Height – The height of capital letters from the baseline to the top of caps, most
accurately measured on a character with a flat bottom (E, H, I, etc.).