Docent sights juggernaut Headline set tight with minus letter spacing |
Docent sights juggernaut Headline set with no additional letter spacing |
Docent sights juggernaut Headline with more open letter spacing |
Docent sights juggernaut Headline with open letter spacing similar to metal type |
Docent sights juggernaut Headline with still more letter spacing |
Docent sights juggernaut Headline with wide letter spacing |
Docent sights juggernaut Headline with wider letter spacing, sometimes used for broadcast |
Letter spacing, character spacing or tracking is an optically consistent typography adjustment to the space between letters to change the visual density of a line or block of text. Letter spacing is distinct from kerning, which adjusts the spacing of particular pairs of adjacent characters such as "7." which would appear to be badly spaced if left unadjusted, and leading, the spacing between lines.
In the days of hot metal typesetting, letter spacing required adding horizontal space between letters of words set in metal type in increments of a minimum of a half-point. Some and Typesetting avoided letter spacing because it was costly in materials and labor. Letter spacing required hand insertion of copper (a half-point), brass (one point), and printer's "lead" (two points) spaces between individual pieces of type or between matrices. Despite the cost, letter spacing was used in print advertising, book publishing, and custom printing (such as high-end stationery, business cards, wedding invitations, and such). It was also used for very short phrases set in all caps or small caps to prevent the phrases from appearing too dark compared to the rest of the page.
Increased letter-spacing has sometimes been used for emphasis, most often in blackletter typesetting and in typewriter manuscripts, where alternative emphatics like italic or bold fonts are less available. In German-language contexts, where blackletter typefaces survived longer than elsewhere, the practice (called sperren) is not quite extinct. Printer and type designer Frederic Goudy stated that "Men who would letterspace blackletter would steal sheep."Comment by Erik Spiekermann (15 October 2005) in Goudy's statement inspired the title of the book Stop Stealing Sheep,
Although digital type sets tighter than metal type on average, this results primarily from the availability of kerning. Digital type does allow for negative sidebearings, which were uncommon in metal type because of the difficulty in cutting a "kern".
In the days of machine-implemented lead typesetting, such as and the Monotype System, letter spacing had to be uniform. In modern digital page-layout software, high-end applications all use relative measurements proportional to the size of the type. QuarkXPress uses units of 1/200 of an em, and Adobe InDesign uses 1/1000 of an em. Therefore, in QuarkXPress, a tracking setting of 3 reduces the visual density of the text noticeably, but in InDesign a tracking setting of 3 is barely noticeable.
With CSS1, a standard of 1996, the property (illustrated) offers some control for "kerning perception", as kerning can be simulated with non-uniform spacing between letters. The CSS3 standard includes the property. In the meantime, used the workaround of , mainly to enhance spaced texts of titles and .
Letter spacing adjustments are frequently employed in news design. Due to deadlines, news editors do not usually have time to rewrite paragraphs that end in split words or create widows or orphans.
Discussing Comic Sans, some researchers, including Sue Walker, Jenny Thomson, and John Stein, posit that the typeface's wide spacing, rather than the shape of its characters, is the reason for its success among dyslexics.
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