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Are people reading what you write? If so, do they understand it?
And will you get the results you expect? Chances are, if you’re
not following traditional rules of design, typography and layout,
they're not, they don't and you won't.
Research from the book "Type and Layout" by Colin Wheildon (Strathmoor Press, 1995) confirms what traditionalists have been saying
for years: how a report or advertisement looks can drastically
reduce the number of people who read it, and the number of readers
who understand it.
Here are a few rules the book reveals will help you get your message across.
Use a serif typeface
Serifs are the small strokes at the end of the main stroke of
a letter. In one research study, people’s understanding of what
they were reading dropped from 67 percent with a serif typeface
to 12 percent with a sans serif.
For maximum legibility, choose a plain serif typeface,
with easily discernible differences between letters.
Emphasise sparingly, using bold or italics
Don't use capitals for body text - only seven percent of readers
found that body text in capitals was easy to read. When the same
section was reset in a serif font in lower case, 100 percent found
it easy to read.
Use bold sparingly. When much of the body text is set in bold,
readers complain of eye fatigue. Besides, too much emphasis -
like too much crying wolf - leads the audience to ignore the whole
passage.
Underlining should never be used either in body text or in headlines.
By spoiling the shape of the letters, it makes text difficult to
read.
Be careful how you use boxes
There's some evidence that boxes do not provide emphasis. Modern
readers appear to ignore anything printed in a box. Probably,
this developed from our habit of ignoring advertising in newspapers
and magazines. Boxes are useful for additional and supporting
information.
Shading has the same effect as a box, in discouraging readers
from considering the contents as part of the body text. Shading
also reduces legibility.
Avoid reversed text
David Ogilvy, the advertising guru, says that copy should never
be set in reverse. He says that it used to be "believed these
devices forced people to read copy; now we know that they make
reading physically impossible".
Break up long documents using subheadings
78 percent of those surveyed in one study said that they found
subheadings useful, especially in long documents.
Use only two or three typefaces
"With so many typefaces, and so little knowledge, college students should be considered armed and dangerous."
Dennis G. Martin, Brigham G. Young University
Mixing typefaces can make the job look like a dog's breakfast.
Most typographers stick to two typefaces in a book or report.
Many choose to use only one, but in different sizes
and weights.
Suit size of type and line to the page
The size of the letter depends on the age and reading level of
the audience, and the length of the line. Most people find it
easy to read type within the range 10 point on an 11 point base
to 12 point on a 14 point base. The base measurement is the distance
between the base of a letter and the base of one in the line immediately
below.
Line length should be no less than 40 characters and no more than
60. This can be awkward on an A4 page. To keep the type size within
the recommended ranges, you'll need two columns or very wide margins.
Justify lines
Justification increases comprehensibility, and is preferred by
the majority of readers from a wide range of backgrounds. Ragged
right is the next best. Text set ragged left, or following a curved
margin, as used in many advertisements, is hard to read, and most
people don't bother.
Use generous margins
Traditionally, hard and softcover books have been printed with
around 50 percent of the page covered in type. Comprehensibility
drops if 60 percent or more of the page is covered.
Let the text go with the flow
"Clarity in layout leads to clarity of content because it requires clarity of thought."
James Hartle, University of Keele
The layout of the page should follow the principle described by
Arnold as 'reading gravity'. In the western world, we start reading
from the top left-hand corner and work our way across each line and
down to the next line until we reach the bottom right-hand corner. Reading gravity, then, is the entrenched habit of reading from the top left across and down the page to the bottom right. Ignoring the reading gravity principle reduces comprehensibility by nearly 50 percent.
Therefore, headings and subheadings should always come before
the text they refer to - just above, or just to the left. Similarly,
the best place for graphics, charts and tables is embedded in
the text, adjacent to the text that refers to them.
"The tragedy is that the average advertisement is read
by only four percent of people on their way through the publication
it appears in. Most of the time, this is the fault of the so-called
'art director' who designs advertisements. If he is an aesthete
at heart - and most of them are - he doesn't care a damn whether
anybody reads the words. He regards them as mere elements in his
pretty design. In many cases he blows away half the readers by
choosing the wrong type. But he doesn't care. He should be boiled
in oil."
David Ogilvy
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