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Found 3 results

  1. A local authority has announced it will ban apostrophes on street signs to avoid problems with computer systems.
  2. I am looking an example of a well designed layout for a dictionary definition. I attached a photo of an example. Does anyone know of or have examples of printed definitions with carefully chosen typography and spacing? Or digital examples? perhaps the heading on a webpage, where the main heading is the business's name (i.e. pentagram) and beneath the heading is the pronuncation (i.e. /ˈpen(t)əˌɡram/) along with the type of speech (i.e.), the definition itself, and the origin of the word (i.e. origin: Greek, "pentagrammon"). They can be non traditional layouts as well. I am mainly looking for font pairings. I realize this is very specific, but any help would be much appreciated. Even if you can't find examples perhaps suggestions of font pairings, spacing, what words to italicize etc.
  3. “Comma Queen” Mary Norris from the New Yorker clarifies the difference between the hyphen (-), the en dash (–), and the em dash (—).
Krimhilde: Blackletter meets Geometric Sans
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