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At some stage almost everybody needs to put some text on
their images. This can take the very simple form of adding a signature or
copyright mark, progressing to a full-blown page of typing such as a
promotional flyer. In general, large spreads of text are not normally set in
Photoshop, but it can be done at a pinch, especially if you are not inclined
to buy and learn In Design or Illustrator. An understanding of the basic
typography jargon is helpful and can take you quite a long way, so here is
the low-down.
The subject of typography is vast, an ancient art with many
archaic terms that have survived since the time of Gutenberg and the first
printing of the Bible. The small lead letters were set onto holding plates,
spaced by pieces of lead (hence leading, the space between lines of text)
and after use were sorted, with capital letters going into the upper drawers
of the case (upper case) and the small letters going into the lower drawers
of the case (lower case). The word font is French for drawer. An apprentice
not working fast enough in sorting the letters back into place would leave
his master 'out of sorts'.
The ability to make multiple copies of a piece of writing
had a profound influence upon the great unwashed. Previously only the monks
and scribes could perform the task and did so at agonisingly slow speed; the
population had to make do with the symbolism depicted on stained-glass
windows, iconography and statues. The hoi polloi of the time were also
terrified that a more learned peasantry would soon be getting ideas above
their station, a fear that was, before too long, a stark reality. Eventually
the leaflet became one of the stronger propaganda tools at the disposal of
those inclined to stir things up a bit. Things have moved on at quite a pace
since and we are now about to lose our ability to communicate in English but
will have legisl- 8tion for putting road signs in text speak and English.
OMG by 2moro it'll b Str8 text speak on the M1. LOL.
ps – I had to get some help with that last bit!

Basic Typography
The shape of letters is defined by the font. 'Font' is the name reserved for
describing a single collection of letters of the same 'weight' and general
design form. The weight describes the thickness of the individual strokes
that make up the letter shapes. A collection of fonts of different weights
(and perhaps for different languages such as Hebrew or Cyrillic) is called a
font family. Thus Myriad Pro is a font family consisting of regular, italic,
condensed, semi-bold, bold and black weights. It is a very fulsome family
with 20 variants before you throw in the extra variations for Greek, Hebrew.
Arabic, and so on. It is typical of a professional font set; most of the
fonts devised by amateurs and made freely available on the web only contain
a basic, reduced 'se' of glyphs. A glyph is a particular instance within a
font such as a letter a. But with a full set there will be almost 50 letter
'a' glyphs alone!
For this reason a font such as Myriad will be chosen for larger projects
(such as Professional Imagemaker) safe in the knowledge that we can tackle
most requirements that come our way. For example Jorgen Brandt writes for us
and it is only courteous to use the correct spelling of Jørgen. Without a
fully specified font we would not be able to do so.
The weight variations may be used to bring attention to a particular
sentence, word or entry within a table. In a business flyer the weight of
font chosen for a particular headline will depend upon how important you
wish that headline to be. The converse is also true, hence the warning to
look closely at 'the small print' of a document.
Placing a Centred Title
This is one of the most common styles for of adding text to an image.
Here's one way:
1. Open your image in Photoshop.
2. Expand the canvas, leaving additional space at the bottom.
3. Select the type colour (although it may be changed later), font, font
size and set the justification to 'centred'.
4. With the Text Tool, drag a box from one side of the image to the other
(or from one border edge to the other. This ensures that the text is
centralised).
5. Type your title and, if needed, any sub titles (using hard returns).
6. Adjust your fonts to taste (see image) then the space between the lines
(the leading). A fast way to change font size is by highlighting the text
then use Ctrl+Shift+ > or < to change the font size two points at a time or
Ctrl+Shift+Alt+ > or < to change the size 10 points at a time. To change the
leading, the shortcut is to highlight the text then click Alt plus the up
and down arrows to change the leading two points at a time.
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