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Common Terms Found in Typography
Typography has been used as a way of communication for a very very long time. It was invented during the eleventh century in China (990-1051BC) and has been used in some form or another ever since. This has made it an essential part of our lives and the most efficient tool we have to deliver a message to an audience.
Even though the use of typography is so universal in our world we can still sometimes struggle to understand exactly what typography is and also what the words associated with typography mean.
So we thought it would be a good idea to make a list of common terms that typographers and designers use to hopefully go some way in demystifying typography.
01. Aperture
The negative space that is partially enclosed in some characters such as the lower part of a lowercase e or a c.
02. Apex
The top point of a character where two strokes meet as seen on an uppercase A.
03. Arc
The curved part of a letter as seen on the lowercase r and c.
04. Ascender
The part of a lowercase letter that rises above the x-height of the other letters.
05. Ball Terminal
The round ball form found at the end of a letter arm.
06. Baseline
The invisible line what characters sit on.
07. Body
The block area that a character lives in. Originally this would have been the physical block that the metal letters sat on. The height of the body equals the point size.
08. Bowl
The enclosed curved part of a character as seen here on an uppercase B.
09. Cap Height
The height of an uppercase letter from the baseline to the cap line.
10. Cap Line
The invisible line that marks the top of an uppercase letter.
11. Counter
The space found inside a fully closed area of a character. Shown here in the o and e.
12. Cross Stroke
Horizontal stroke found in characters as seen here on the t.
13. Eye
The space found inside the fully closed area of the lowercase e.
14. Foot
In a serif typeface its the part of the stroke that rests on the baseline
15. Grotesk
The German name for Sans Serif.
16. Hairline
The thinnest stroke found in a typeface.
17. Italic
Slanted version of the typeface. Slants from left to right.
18. Kerning
Kerning is the horizontal space between two letters.
19. Kursiv
The German name for Kerning.
20. Leading
Leading refers to the lead strips that were used to add vertical space between lines metal type.
21. Linespacing
The vertical space between lines of text from baseline to baseline.
22. Lowercase
The small letters in the typeface.
23. Monospaced
A typeface that has letters of a fixed width.
24. Point Size
The unit used to measure the size of a typeface.
25. Sans Serif
A term that refers to typefaces without the lines or feet at the ends of the letterforms.
26. Serif
A term that refers to typefaces that have a line or stroke at the ends of the letterforms.
27. Shoulder
The curved part of a letter found on some lowercase letters.
28. Spine
The curved stroke found in the letter S.
29. Stroke
The vertical stroke found in a letter.
30. Teardrop Terminal
A teardrop shape found at the end of a letterform.
31. Tracking
Tracking refers to the uniform amount of space between characters in a word or section of text.
32. Uppercase
The capital letters of a typeface.
33. Vertex
The point at the top or bottom of a letter where two points meet.
34. X-Height
A term to measure the height of a lowercase letter without the ascenders or descenders.