Mid-Century Type: Typography, Graphics, Designers
Publication details: London ; New York : Merrell, 2023.Description: 239 pages : illustrations (color and black and white) ; 29 cmISBN:- 9781858947075
- 686.22 JUR 2023
Item type | Current library | Home library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | Course reserves |
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FIRST CITY UNIVERSITY COLLEGE | FIRST CITY UNIVERSITY COLLEGE | Open Collection | FCUC Library | 686.22 JUR 2023 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 00025217 |
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686.22 HYP 2010 Hyperactivitypography from A to Z / | 686.22 JUR 2002 About face : | 686.22 JUR 2006 What is typography? / | 686.22 JUR 2023 Mid-Century Type: Typography, Graphics, Designers | 686.22 KAN 2002 A type primer / | 686.22 KIN 2002 Unjustified texts : | 686.22 KIN 2004 Modern typography : |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
"Mid-Century Type is a fascinating visual exploration of how, during the middle decades of the last century, the typographer became an independent, influential contributor to a fast-developing technological world of communications. The years after the Second World War were a time of great economic, social, and cultural change as consumerism erupted across industrialized countries, fuelled by the growth of mass communication. The same period was also one of exceptional creativity, including in the fields of typography and graphic design. During the war, governments came to appreciate the skill of designers in communicating public information effectively. Once the conflict was over, designers were recognized for the first time as having an essential role to play in the rebuilding of economies, infrastructure, and public morale. The typographer, however, was still something of a 'Cinderella': type was crucial to communication in almost any medium, yet typography remained a vague and largely unacknowledged profession. This perception changed dramatically between 1945 and 1965. The range of media expanded, and the influence of time-based media such as television and film was profound, providing information 'as it happens' and transforming the turning of a page into the equivalent of the film editor's cut. 'Speed' was the elixir of growth and prosperity. The specific needs of highway and airport signage were recognized as requiring the expertise of a typographer. Phototypesetting and offset lithographic printing coalesced to provide a full-color reproduction, which in turn vastly increased the sale of all printed material, but especially books and magazines. All of this drew typographers into what became established as specialist fields of printed and screen media. Finally, the cultural value of the typographer's work could be equated with that of the artist, poet, author, and film director." --Publisher marketing.