![]() ![]() Book 6, for instance, besides using Adobe Garamond for the text and Able for chapter titles and page numbers, employs Shipwreak Bold, Frankfurter Inline, Flemish Script, Brimley, Dollhouse, and P22 Da Vinci Forward. There is a site that compiles listings of the type fonts used in the first six Harry Potter books. Sounds easy? But it isn’t, not when you’re dealing with a lengthy text, artwork and graphics, and a multitude of type fonts for different characters’ writings. There I add the chapter opening art, finesse any special type treatments, check the line breaks, balance the spreads, and add the running heads.Īfter each read, I make the changes, rebreaking lines and rebalancing spreads as needed. ![]() I get the job as word processor files, convert them to XPress Tags, translate them, and pour them into XPress templates. Here’s what Walrod succinctly said in a blog about the process of typesetting the Harry Potter books: ![]() The Managing Editor was Karyn Browne the Continuity Editor was Cheryl Klein and the Manufacturing Director was Angela Biola The book was typeset by Brad Walrod and was printed and bound by Quebecor World Fairfield in Fairfield, Pennsylvania. The text was set in 12-point Adobe Garamond, a typeface based on the sixteenth-century type designs of Claude Garamond, redrawn by Robert Slimbach in 1989. The art for both the jacket and the interior was created using pastels on toned printmaking paper. This book was art directed by David Saylor. That point was brought home in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows, which included a colophon celebrating the typeface used for that book as well as the typesetter (also for the two previous books). In an earlier post, I had written a paean to the typeface Helvetica and commented on how aesthetics and design are at last catching up with computer typesetting. ![]()
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