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Thinking with Type, 2nd revised ed.: A Critical Guide for Designers, Writers, Editors, & Students Paperback – November 3, 2010


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"Thinking with Type is to typography what Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time is to physics."—I Love Typography

The best-selling
Thinking with Type in a revised and expanded second edition:Thinking with Type is the definitive guide to using typography in visual communication. Ellen Lupton provides clear and focused guidance on how letters, words, and paragraphs should be aligned, spaced, ordered, and shaped. The book covers all typography essentials, from typefaces and type families, to kerning and tracking, to using a grid. Visual examples show how to be inventive within systems of typographic form, including what the rules are, and how to break them.

This revised edition includes forty-eight pages of new content with the latest information on:

• style sheets for print and the web
• the use of ornaments and captions
• lining and non-lining numerals
• the use of small caps and enlarged capitals
• mixing typefaces
• font formats and font licensing

Plus, new eye-opening demonstrations of basic typography design with letters, helpful exercises, and dozens of additional illustrations.

Thinking with Type is the typography book for everyone: designers, writers, editors, students, and anyone else who works with words. If you love font and lettering books, Ellen Lupton's guide reveals the way typefaces are constructed and how to use them most effectively.

Fans of
Thinking with Type will love Ellen Lupton's new book Extra Bold: A Feminist, Inclusive, Anti-racist, Nonbinary Field Guide for Graphic Designers.
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From the Publisher

Thinking With Type

"should be in the collection of every designer, writer, editor, publisher and typographer."

—The Designer's Review of Books

Thinking With Type

"Thinking with Type is to typography what Stephen Hawking’s A Brief History of Time is to physics."

—I Love Typography

Thinking with Type

"a rewarding and recommendable guide, all the more so because of Lupton’s gifts as an educator and critic."

—Typographica

Thinking with Type

"If you get a kick out of using different fonts on the computer or have and appreciation for lettering, this book belongs on your bookshelf."

—HelloArtsy

Extra Bold
Herbert Bayer
Graphic Design: The New Basics (2nd Edition)
The Senses
Graphic Design Thinking
Type on Screen
Customer Reviews
4.8 out of 5 stars 211
4.5 out of 5 stars 26
4.6 out of 5 stars 923
4.5 out of 5 stars 109
4.6 out of 5 stars 473
4.3 out of 5 stars 117
Price $16.99 $39.97 $16.21 $43.67 $16.89 $13.98
More design classics by Ellen Lupton Extra Bold is the inclusive, practical, and informative career handbook for designers that we've all been waiting for. Explores the evolution of Herbert Bayer's design process, from his student works featuring hand lettering to mechanically printed typography and hyperreal photo illustrations. Explains the key concepts of visual language that inform any work of design, from logo or letterhead to a complex website. Explores how space, materials, sound, and light affect the mind and body. Co-edited with Andrea Lipps. Hands-on, up-close approach to instructional design brainstorming techniques. The definitive guide to using classic typographic concepts of form and structure to make dynamic compositions for screen-based applications.

Editorial Reviews

Review

"For any student in need of an overview that covers practice type use and conception, this is the go-to volume." - Omnivoracious

About the Author

Ellen Lupton is one of America's preeminent design educators. Her books include Skin , Inside Design Now , and Mixing Messages , among others. She is currently director of the design program at Maryland Institute of Art and Design.

Product details

About the author

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Ellen Lupton
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Ellen Lupton is a designer, writer, and educator. Her books include Design Is Storytelling, Graphic Design Thinking, Health Design Thinking, and Extra Bold: A Feminist, Inclusive, Anti-Racist, Nonbinary Field Guide for Graphic Designers. The third edition of her bestselling book Thinking with Type launches in March, 2024. She teaches in the Graphic Design MFA program at Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore (MICA), where she proudly serves as the Betty Cooke and William O. Steinmetz Design Chair. She is Curator Emerita at Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum in New York City, where her exhibitions included Herbert Bayer: Bauhaus Master and The Senses: Design Beyond Vision.

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
2,520 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find this typography book informative, with fantastic examples throughout and beautiful visual demonstrations of different styles. Moreover, the book serves as a useful textbook that helps with assignments, and one customer notes it covers traditional and contemporary approaches to basics in design. Additionally, the writing style receives positive feedback for being an awesome introduction to typography, and customers appreciate its value for money and aesthetic appeal. However, the readability receives mixed reviews, with some finding it easy to read while others find it unreadable.

75 customers mention "Information content"68 positive7 negative

Customers find the book informative and helpful, providing a good introduction to the topic with fantastic examples throughout.

"This book is excellent, gorgeous, informative, and engaging. I learned alot about typography reading from this book...." Read more

"I needed the book for class and found it very informative and interesting! Good for those looking to get into web and graphic design." Read more

"Super informative and the information it well organized and reads easily." Read more

"The content is good, the way the ebook is set up makes it hard to read on my Mac or iPad. There is no zooming ability and the text is small." Read more

68 customers mention "Design"66 positive2 negative

Customers appreciate the book's design content, noting its beautiful examples of good design and great visual demonstrations of different styles, making it a staple in any graphic designer's reference library.

"...needed this book for college, she loves it as she has a great interest in art, she said she'll be able to learn a lot for this book, not only for..." Read more

"...This book it's beautifully designed and contains invaluable typography information, history, exercises, etc...." Read more

"...Filled with aiding visuals and obviously designed beautifully." Read more

"...A great book for the fledgling graphic designer." Read more

67 customers mention "Use"65 positive2 negative

Customers find the book very useful as a textbook, offering many helpful examples that assist with assignments.

"Needed this book for my graphic design class. Very useful and an overall neat book." Read more

"Great examples, lots of awesome facts, beautifully written. Lovely book to use for reference and inspiration as a designer." Read more

"Very useful resource." Read more

"This book is an excellent resource for anyone who is serious about graphic layout. It is not a type book; it does not review fonts individually...." Read more

56 customers mention "Writing style"48 positive8 negative

Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, describing it as an awesome introduction to typography that is well written, concise, and easy to understand.

"Great book on typography. I used it in two separate design classes and still reference it for my personal and free-lance work." Read more

"Beautifully written, and shows exquisite examples BUT does not teaches at all. Lupton does not have the proper pedagogic skill of teaching...." Read more

"...It is well written and entertaining...." Read more

"This well-written book about typography is ironically very hard to read in the Kindle format. Illustration and photos blur when scaled." Read more

22 customers mention "Value for money"18 positive4 negative

Customers find the book to be a great value.

"Great book. Great price. Came faster than expected! Highly Satisfied." Read more

"...Good price, Good book." Read more

"...It's the cheapest book I've had to buy for a class so far, just good book especially for its purpose...." Read more

"...I got this book for a great price though the deals on Amazon. I would buy it again. Buy it and see for yourself...." Read more

15 customers mention "Aesthetic value"12 positive3 negative

Customers find the book visually appealing, with one customer noting the beautiful typefaces throughout.

"...required text for a class, but I have kept it, it is fun to read and beautiful. Any field that typography is used can use this book...." Read more

"...It's also an aesthetic delight, just beautifully designed. Highly recommended." Read more

"...I may return it. Annoying as hell and it’s a shame because it looks interesting." Read more

"...It has dark spots on the cover and scratches on the pages. It looks like a used book instead of a new book...." Read more

15 customers mention "History"14 positive1 negative

Customers appreciate the book's historical content, with one customer noting that every page contains interesting facts.

"A helpful book that gives you the basics of typography: history, the basics any graphic designer should know about typefaces, and how to use them..." Read more

"The snarky "Type Crimes" in the book are delightful, history is fascinating." Read more

"...A good example of the sum of amazing parts coming together. Explains history, methods, even column layout. Beautifully illustrated...." Read more

"...It has a lot of historical and some technical information but little in the way of principles or guidance that applies to actual design...." Read more

57 customers mention "Readability"29 positive28 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's readability, with some finding it enjoyable and easy to understand, while others describe it as unreadable.

"...Comprehensive, yet easy to understand. Filled with aiding visuals and obviously designed beautifully." Read more

"good book, but hard to read on Kindle. will need to get a hard copy to see the "true picture"." Read more

"Easy to read, the book has many examples of what to do and not to do when choosing a typeface for a layout." Read more

"A little boring. But it gets the point across." Read more

Affordable secondhand book
5 out of 5 stars
Affordable secondhand book
I knew the book was secondhand and a bit cheaper than buying it new so it was ok. It was just a bit dirty, had a bit of eraser residues inside and the cover was a bit dirty too but could easily remove a bit with disinfectant wipes. It has normal use and was well taken care of inside, none of the pages was damaged. I would buy another book from this seller again.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on January 16, 2016
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Often when I talk to friends about my publishing, conversations are short. People get the idea of writing and authorship; they generally draw a blank when it comes to publishing. In particular, the idea that a book needs to be designed seems almost mystical [1]. So my delight in finding a new title focused on identifying and using type (or fonts) has been hard to explain…

    Ellen Lupton, author of Thinking with Type, has clearly traveled this route. She searched for a suitable textbook on using type for her class at the Maryland Institute College of Art, but resolved that she needed to write the book herself (7).

    The first thing to notice about Thinking with Type is that the book is rather heavy (1.4 pounds) and a bit more square (7” x 8.5”) than the more typical paperback (9” x 6”). Thinking with Type has a lot of glossy photographs to illustrate the points being made. Needless to say, it is a visual delight.

    The format of the book serves its purpose well. Lupton writes:

    This book is about thinking with typography—in the end, the emphasis falls on “with”. Typography is a tool for doing things with: shaping content, giving language a physical body, enabling the social flow of messages (8).

    If the medium is the message, as Marshall McLuhan famously remarked, then the primary medium of a book is type. Good books sport good design and the designer needs to know the role played by type. A good choice of type requires some knowledge of how it came to be, the associations it brings to bear, and the way it relates to the subject of the book. Are you interested yet?

    Lupton organizes her presentation into three categories: letter, text, and grid (or spatial organization).

    Letters. Early text was significantly influenced by the human body and calligraphy. Johannes Gutenberg, for example, published the first movable type in a Bible in which he attempted to emulate Bibles that were previously written exclusively by hand and included copious illustrations. Movable type caught on in Germany, but not in China where it was invented, because the Latin alphabet was phonetic and could be illustrated with relatively few letters, unlike Mandarin which pictured words rather than sounding them out. Mandarin had too many letter forms to be easily automated with those early printing presses (13).

    Text. A text, Lupton reminds us, is: an ongoing sequence of words distinct from shorter headlines or captions (87). Debates about a book, which requires an author, as opposed to “text” are everywhere in the postmodern period when authors, like Jacques Derrida (91), question to the need for an authority figure in charge of producing a text. Lupton enters this debate, in part, by elegantly illustrating alternatives to simple text.

    For example, is a webpage with many links embedded a book? Most people would say no. Why? Who, for example, is the author? Is it the programmer, the web-designer, the illustrator, or the copy writer? Clearly, questions relating to the formatting of text go way beyond the decision to right, left, or center justify.

    Grid. Of the three sections (letters, text, and grid), grid is probably the least familiar. Lupton defines grid in this way:

    A GRID BREAKS SPACE OR TIME INTO REGULAR UNITS [all small caps]. A grid can be simple or complex, specific or generic, tightly defined or loosely interpreted. Typographical grids are all about control (151).

    Here Lupton’s use of illustrations is amazing [2]. The number of choices in organizing text is amazing because most of the options are not at all obvious. Those of us who use study bibles, for example, are used to seeing footnotes and other annotations down the center of the page, but this is seldom done anywhere else—most people are accustomed to footnotes at the bottom of the page.

    Repeatedly, Lupton draws on magazine grid to illustrate novel grids that highlight different dimensions of the text. The influence of graphical artists on how we perceive text is striking and at times even subversive. Presentation matters and significantly influences text interpretation. Think, for example, of the use of red letters in some Bibles—the original Greek was all caps without any punctuation and no red letters!

    Ellen Lupton’s Thinking with Type is a fun and informative book. For those of you who don’t care about publishing and have no interest in design might think of it as a conversation starter. It is that interesting.

    [1] It is kind of like asking a city kid where food comes from—well duh, it comes from the grocery store!

    [2] Of course, I gravitated to the Biblia Polyglotta (154-155) which in 1568 offered the reader the Bible in Hebrew, Latin, Aramaic, Syriac, and Greek. Today, a good program could organize such a text in minutes, but in 1568 all that was done by hand suggesting that proof-readers really did need some language skills.
    22 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on March 12, 2014
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    "Thinking with Type" proved to be just what I was looking for. As someone who has studied graphic design for two years and works both with web and print, I needed a book on type which not only provided a theoretical basis but was also practical, explaining how theoretical design decisions could be applied though print software (inDesign in this case) and in on-line media.
    I knew a little about type from my studies and practical work but wanted a book to take me beyond the basics maybe to the level of a competent practitioner .
    Brim full of examples, there is plenty of inspiration here, and all of the ideas are more than amply illustrated. Infact, the wealth of examples is one of the strengths of the book.
    There is a lot out of information there about typography but this book is the most useful I have so far come across.

    I liked the extensive examples from many different traditions.
    What to look for in typeface design and how the anatomy of type influences the practical use of a typeface are particularly well explained. Layout, paragraph formatting, kerning and tracking and other aspects of spacing are very clearly covered. There are always plenty examples of typefaces shown.
    I particularly liked the notes about "type crimes".
    The book is beautifully illustrated and designed.Its printed on very nice ( and durable) paper stock. This is a good thing as my copy is in for a hard time as no doubt its going to get plenty of use.
    Great value, up-to-date and full of useful stuff for anyone wanting to make a beautiful (or just plain workman-like) job of type in print or on screen.
    7 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2024
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    I found this book to be a great resource. I didn't find any straight-up design guidance here but did find a lot of inspiration and reference. The book touches a bit on the history of certain Type forms, which I love, and provides plenty of examples for context. It's written as a blend between type history book and a design guide. I use it as a brainstorming tool, a reminder of all the crazy design ideas that people leaned into and made successful. Great for breaking the routine and challenging yourself.
  • Reviewed in the United States on May 15, 2024
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    I like the book very much!!! It has new ideas mixed with interestingly told old school info.
    It wasn't 5 stars because of 2 moments:

    1. The fact that I've pre-ordered the 3rd edition Kindle format and waited 2 or 3 months for the release that was being delayed week after week and just cancelled.

    2. The images in the electronic edition are all pixelated. And it is a pity. ((((
  • Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2014
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Ellen Lupton's work on this book is clear, defines the terminology associated with typography thoroughly, and offers many helpful examples. The book itself is beautifully made and the companion website has enough information to create an initial framework for long-term study. Lupton makes the work accessible and fun with the examples she chooses, with emphasis both on initially expressing the rules and then with attention to how a designer might break the rules or explore them playfully. When I expose students to her work, even in the context of an introductory course in which typography is only one of many topics, they become instantly more curious and critical about type. This book joins Lupton's other design books on my shelf. Whenever my eyes get tired of typesetting, she pulls me back in.
    2 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2023
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    I highly recommend this book. It has a great layout. It had really good information. I highly recommend buying this book specially if your new to type. I got this book for a great price though the deals on Amazon. I would buy it again. Buy it and see for yourself. The only thing I wished for about this book is making the book bigger & print bigger for easier reading. Other then that it is a great book. I highly recommend it.
    2 people found this helpful
    Report

Top reviews from other countries

  • Wesgley
    5.0 out of 5 stars Grande compilado
    Reviewed in Brazil on June 4, 2024
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    Apresenta muito bem os conceitos de tipografia, e a relação no processo de editoração, incluindo os marcadores de revisão.
  • Gema Carrillo
    5.0 out of 5 stars Muy interesante
    Reviewed in Mexico on May 5, 2024
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Un nuevo básico del diseño
  • João Marques
    5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing book!
    Reviewed in Spain on June 16, 2022
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    This is an amazing book, both the content and the layout are amazing to read and look at. I’m so happy with my purchase!
    Customer image
    João Marques
    5.0 out of 5 stars
    Amazing book!

    Reviewed in Spain on June 16, 2022
    This is an amazing book, both the content and the layout are amazing to read and look at. I’m so happy with my purchase!
    Images in this review
    Customer imageCustomer image
  • Aaron
    5.0 out of 5 stars Great book, great condition
    Reviewed in Canada on July 22, 2024
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Helped me gain an understanding of when and how to use text in my YouTube videos and future design endeavours. Never thought I could get so fired up about typography
  • Andrea
    5.0 out of 5 stars Libro adatto per chi studia grafica
    Reviewed in Italy on January 5, 2024
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    Interessante per chi studia grafica