36
37
38
39
40
100

Substituting one visual element for another to convey a unique concept or meaning

Substitution

100

Serif like extentions projecting from arms and curved strokes

Spur

100

A primary vertical or near-vertical full-length stroke of a character

Stem

100

Any single linear element in a character

Stroke

100

Letter or sign designed to represent an activity, idea or object

Symbol

200

A stroke ending that tapers into a teardrop shape

Teardrop Terminal

200

The end of a main stroke in a character

Terminal

200

A short stroke extending from a letterform

Tail

200

A common, high-resolution, graphic file format used for saving raster or bitmapped images such as scans, photographs, illustrations, and logos

TIFF/ Tagged Image File Format

200

The thinning ending of a stroke

Taper

300

A typeset sample produced to show the visual properties of a typeface

Type Specimen

300

Spacing added to or removed from groups of letters outside the original spacing and kerning specified within a font file

Tracking

300

An address referring to a document on the internet

URL/ Uniform Resource Locator

300

Letters larger than–and often differing from–the corresponding lowercase letters.

Uppercase (Capitals/Caps)

300

A nonspatial continuum in which events progress in an irreversible succession from the past through
the present and into the future

Time

400

A series of framed images put together, one after another, to stimulate motion and interactivity

Video

400

A digital image that is composed of lines and curves that are defined by mathematical objects

Vector

400

An alphabet created for the purpose of reproduction. A set of characters making up an alphabet with design features that make them similar to each other. It may be named after the individual who designed it (Bodoni, Caslon, Garamond, Gill, Fruitger), refer to a county (Caledonia, Helvetica), or be named for it’s appearance or character (Futura, Eurostyle, Modern).

Typeface

400

What makes it different from competing products, and
more importantly, what leads customers to buy it

USP/- Abbreviation for Unique Selling Proposition

400

The intersection of a bowl with a stem, a diagonal stem with horizontal a horizontal stem or two bowls

Waist

500

The heaviness of a typeface, independent of its size; can refer to a style within a font family (Thin or Regular).

Weight

500

This should make the intervals between words look the same and be consistent. One must achieve a visual balance that is appropriate for the piece and it’s legibility. Considerations include: type face, point size, line length, and general color of the page. Words must not appear to run together or be spaced so wide that they appear as separate words. The goal is to have word spacing that facilitates a natural flow an dreadability of the text.

Word Spacing

500

A desirable technical connection between what the designer/operator sees on the screen and what will emerge as the final output on film or print

WSYIWYG

500

Contraction of binary digit, this is the smallest unit of information that a computer can hold

Bit

500

The process of creating separate negatives and plates for each color of ink (cyan, magenta, yellow, and black) that will be used for publication

Color Separation

M
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