January 13, 2016
The D Word: Periodically Speaking
The art of newspaper and magazine layout began in earnest starting in the early nineteenth century as a method for printers to jam as much information (first words, then—as technology advanced—words and pictures) and advertising onto a page as could fit and still be readable. This was graphic “design” by default, requiring considerable craftsmanship to align the various letterpress elements, and demanding more than a modicum of typographic competency to distinguish the editorial from advertising content—and also one advertisement from another. The craftspeople who generally did this work, who began as printers or typesetters, were called layout or make-up artists, and their responsibility was to compose pages while adhering to the periodical’s particular logic or format.
Observed
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Observed
By Steven Heller
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