Grid Systems: Principles of Organizing Type (Design Briefs) |
| | | | Title: | Grid Systems: Principles of Organizing Type (Design Briefs) | | Author: | Kimberly Elam | | Publisher: | Princeton Architectural Press | | Type: | Book / Paperback | | Publication Date: | 12 August, 2004 | | ISBN / ISBN-13: | 1568984650 / 9781568984650 | | List Price: | $19.95 | | You Save: | $6.38 | | Amazon Price: | $13.57 | |
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Product Description Although grid systems are the foundation for almost all typographic design, they are often associated with rigid, formulaic solutions. However, the belief that all great design is nonetheless based on grid systems (even if only subverted ones) suggests that few designers truly understand the complexities and potential riches of grid composition. In her best-selling Geometry of Design, Elam shows how proportion, symmetry, and other geometrical systems underlie many of the visual relationships that make for good design. Now, Elam brings the same keen eye and clear explanations to bear on the most prevalent, and maybe least understood, system of visual organization: the grid. Filled with extensive research and more than 100 informative examples from the Bauhaus to Nike ads, Grid Systems provides a rich, easy-to-understand overview and demonstrates a step-by-step approach to typographic composition. It suggests design strategies that transcend simple function and reductionist recipes to allow grids to become a means of truly dynamic communication. Any designer, educator, or student will benefit greatly from this elegant slim book, chock-a-block full of colorful examples, helpful vellum overlays, and Elam's insightful analysis.
| Other Items You May Enjoy: Browse Books From These Related Subjects: Customer Reviews:
Didn't Help 21 September, 2007 If you want an excellent book dealing with the grid - and if you want to actually learn something - get Tim Samara's Making and Breaking the Grid. I was very unhappy with this purchase.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A3AYVB9Y16I941
Great For Computer Geeks Too! 12 January, 2008 I am a web designer and a someone who appreciates good print design. A lot of books on CSS (cascading style sheets) try to explain the concept of grids, but these are usually written by people that have a great grasp of the tech side of things, but their writing skills, or ability to relate these concepts are limited.
This book doesn't mention web design (so far as I've read), but she perfectly explains grids.
Lastly, this book is a piece of art. It is pretty. It is stylish. It has semi-transparent overlays in many of the sections allowing one to see a page without grids. This book is special.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A1NDU3JELDRL2B
I'm Not Sure I Like This Book 16 May, 2008 The organization of the book seems a bit disjointed to me. I would have also liked to have seen a lot of the examples use actual type rather than block diagrams.
The overlays are helpful, more discussion about them would make them even more useful. I want to like the book, but am not quite there. If I had to describe the book in one word it would be sterile.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A143LDZ78QDEV1
Super Slow Shipping 25 October, 2007 amazon has super slow shipping. took a month for the book to arrive. had to buy another book at a bookstore.
- Reviewed by customer ID: ASXK8NK6YSVZ5
Well-designed To Sell 30 July, 2008 Grid Systems had excited me to the point that I went to the store and bought it while my Amazon order was delayed in shipping (t'was never delivered). I tore into it with great delight until I reached about page 20. It was then that I started to notice an abundance of the same types of 'grid example thumbnails' with one-sentence notes. While, in the first half, these are informative, they just become page fillers that speak to the same principals again and again. There are far too many of them. It's clear that this is designed to make the book heavier.
My interest peaked again, though, when I got to Jan Tschichold's 'Die Neue Typographie' layout (as promised on the cover). There was an overlay of vellum with the grid for the piece. "Finally," I thought, "some applied theory!" But no. The overlay shows the grid and a triangle (mystery triangle to me- never explained). The accompanying 7 sentences do little more than to describe the piece and provide a history. This is par for the rest of the real-world examples in the book: A complex overlay with zero supplemental information on it.
This book is well-designed to sell if you flip through it or look at the Look Inside on Amazon because you'll think there are in-depth analysis for historical and popular works based on the grid. But there aren't.
Consider another option.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A9681B4IAYAU1
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