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Category: Book Design

15% off “Contenu: A font specimen book from Hackberry Font Foundry” - July 21, 2010 by David Bergsland

Font Design & Typography: Fwd: Promote “Contenu: A font specimen book from Hackberry Font Foundry” by forwarding this message to your readers.

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A major new release at Hackberry Font Foundry - July 6, 2010 by David Bergsland

Announcing this all over

You may have seen this already, but it is a major piece of work and probably my most mature and sophisticated set of font designs yet. I finally broke down and spaced them for body copy—so they will work well at text sizes [from 9-point to 12-point] without the need to fiddle with the spacing. The design is a contemporary take on oldstyle serif typefaces using Jenson as the mask. The roots of this design go back to Minister which Monotype says has Garalde influence.

It is very conservative for me. I even went to a small bowl on the lowercase a. What’s the world coming to?

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PDF to ePub conversions - July 3, 2010 by David Bergsland

No, this is not a step by step. It’s a discussion of the realities of dealing with publishing in the second decade of the 21st century. Specifically, I want to talk about dealing with graphically intensive books in multiple channels.

One of the Linked-In groups I’m in has been debating the role of XML in “future-proofing” documents. They are mainly coming from employment at large publishing houses with hundreds or thousands of legacy books—many from before the e-reader age, many from before the digital age entirely. That’s not what I am talking about either.

This is redesign not conversion

That’s the first thing you need to accept—like it or not. There is no way to convert a typographically excellent, graphically intensive book from PDF to ePub. There are too many limitations with ePub. Here’s a list of the things you’ll need to get rid of as you make the conversion:

  • Fonts: All you have to work with are a limited portion of the originally limited Web palette of fonts
  • Vector graphics: at this point you need to convert everything to JPEG.
  • Anchored graphics: Everything must be inline.
  • Columns: This is all single column stuff.
  • Nested styles: You’ll need to hand format run-in heads with character styles
  • Styles in general: Depending on who you use to distribute your masterpiece, you’ll probably need to convert to the H1-6, p, ol, ul choices of HTML [I'm thinking Kindle here].

It’ s a very different way of thinking

I keep on hearing that some types of books will not convert. That’s not true. What is true is that some designers are not willing to work within the given limitations as we wait for our options to improve. For one of my new bloggin acquaintances, I made a couple of comparison pieces [PDF vs. ePub] this morning. I thought you might want to take a look and see what I had to change. Yes, the ePub version is hideous. But, it is selling as well as the PDF version—though the printed version is still outselling both.

The PDF sampleThe ePub sample

Does this miss the mark for you?

What experiences are you having that suggest my choices are bad or wrong?

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eBooks & ePUB: multi-channel releases - June 27, 2010 by David Bergsland

One of the interesting things about the new paradigm of publishing is the lack of exclusivity. As I publish works for Radiqx and clients, I am continually struck by how many places I normally release things. My norm now is to start with Lulu, then do a Createspace version, then make an html version for Kindle, then a Word version for Smashwords, an ePUB version on Lulu for iPad, a PDF of one of the versions for Scribd, and others yet to be discovered.

Part of this is to see what sells and who checks it out, and what action develops. This is all in flux as far as I can see. So far, Amazon are doing the best [both CreateSpace, and Kindle],  closely followed by Lulu—but these results are changing weekly. As far as traffic is concerned, Scribd seems to do the best. But, Smashwords has more people checking out samples. It is a real interesting mix. As far as I am concerned, it is much more interesting than my old relationships with a giant publisher back East somewhere.

It takes constant redesigning

This is where InDesign and the Creative Suite 5 in general, really shine. InDesign CS5 has really helped out the workflow. Some sites require separate insides and covers (Lulu & CreateSpace), some require HTML (Kindle), some require ePUB (iPad), some require Word (Smashwords), some work best with PDF (Scribd). They all take specialized designs. However, with layout adjustment turned on and a complete set of styles (paragraph and character) set up, all of this goes relatively quickly.

Of course, “they” all say you must get into the code. But you should know of my code challenge by now. If it requires code [beyond HTML and CSS], I’m not going to do it. My hope (and constant feature request) is that some app in CS6 will enable me to drop the need to be constantly playing with HTML and CSS also. Already, I am using Dreamweaver CS5′s CSS dialog boxes to edit my CSS—even for my WordPress templates.

It’s a brave new world

I’m really having fun learning to work in this new world. I’m gradually finding friends and sources of help. Liz Castro and Joel Friedlander regularly offer good advice on their blogs, for example. It’s really going to be interesting to see where it all goes from here.

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New release! Publishing with InDesign CS5 - April 12, 2010 by David Bergsland

The book is available through Lulu now—Amazon and the rest are coming soon.

This revision includes the new features for CS5 that apply to formatting with styles.

Again, most of the revisions are geared toward making InDesign work smoother and more efficiently in your workflow. I’ve been surprised, as always, by how quickly I’ve become addicted to the new version. It’s a really strong upgrade again.

New in CS5

  • Simplified object selection and editing
    Do almost everything with the selection tool
    Direct access to the content of frames
  • Live Corner Effects.
    Adjust corners individually in layout view
  • Easy grid placement
    Generate grids with arrow keys: while adding objects
  • Track text changes
    Only works in story editor
  • Paragraphs that span and split columns
    Make your lists into automatic multiple sub column listings and so on
  • All-new Layers panel
    Reconfiguring grouped objects: simply drag objects from one group to another in the Layers panel
  • Document-installed fonts
    Automatically install packaged fonts (only works for OpenType and TrueType fonts), but it works great!
  • Live captions
    Generate static or live captions automatically: from image metadata.
  • Gap tool
    Give drag’n'drop layout control of grids and multicolumn layouts
  • Multiple page sizes
    Page Selection tool
  • Interactive documents and presentations
  • Animation panel; Object States panel; Timing panel; Media panel; Preview panel: New panels help you add rich media to Page layouts
  • Integrates with CS Review
    Online proofing,commented, and reviewing. Excellent resource: but it costs extra by subscription after the first year
  • InDesign CS5 pages to Flash CS5 with greater fidelity.

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Merry Christmas! & thoughts on the coming year… - December 3, 2009 by David Bergsland

it’s been a surprising year. I never would have expected to be forced into going into what the government calls retirement. That has been a huge adjustment.

For a man, retirement is close to what housewives experience if circumstances keep them from being able to clean their home. it attacks the core of our being. I have been amazed at how much of my self identity is tied up in what I do.

On the other hand, it has been a joy to get back into personal creative endeavors. I’ve designed dozens of items for the Radiqx Zazzle site (buper stickers are doing well so far). I’m getting ready to release my first novel. I find it is a much better escape to write the novels I read. It’s not as much fun as the new Baldacci, Clancy (if we ever see one of those again), Cussler, de Brul, Dale Brown, Brad Thor, Daniel silva, W.E.B. Griffin, or any of the other authors I love to read. But the involvement is incredible and the ability to create new realities is really fun. I think you’ll find it a good read.

On-demand Publishing

I’m still focused on this for several reasons.

  • My lack of capital makes it the only real choice
  • it keeps works available to limited audiences like those of you who follow what I am doing
  • It allows me to easily generate multiple versions of a work with no additional expense
  • It allows me to generate eBooks which seem to growing incredibly fast in use

However, it’s hard to be competitive on-demand. The book prices are higher (at least for mass-driven competition). The printing options are much more limited.

It is greatly ramping up my skills at book design, though. That I really like. There is still nothing ( to me) like the feel of a new book and a potentially good read. i realize that this is becoming a lost art to many of the young. But I’m not sure how well Kindle, Nook, and the others will hold out in the long run. How comfortable are they to use? If you have one, I’d love to hear your opinions. Amazon just announced agin that Kindle is their best-selling product of any type in their entire company. Nook is already sold out and demand is outstripping production. Clearly,  people want something like this.

I guess when my ship comes in, I’ll get one.

I hope you all have a wonderful holiday season. 

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Black Sail: Invasion Amazon release with ISBN - November 22, 2009 by David Bergsland
We published a version for Amazon, too.
We made the most common graphic design mistake and it cracks us up. So, we let it slide.
Publication Date: Nov 22 2009
ISBN/EAN13: 1449531237 / 9781449531232
Page Count: 408
Binding Type: US Trade Paper
Trim Size: 6″ x 9″
Language: English
Color: Black and White
Related Categories: Fiction / Political
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Making an essential anchored object style - October 21, 2009 by David Bergsland

Adding anchored objects can be a little tedious. One of the most painful aspects of making anchored frames to hold illustrations, sidebar notes, or headlines is the tediousness of the repetitive filling out of the anchored object dialog box.

The simple solution is to make those settings in an object style.

Then all you do is place the object as an inline graphic and hit the shortcut to convert it to an anchored object and to offset it where you need it. Or place it, hit the shortcut and then insert it into the text where you need it. It will automatically be anchored and offset as you designed it.

Let’s make a style to automatically offset a frame into the sidebar area next to the column on a single column page

Make a new Object style with all the options turned off . Turn on Anchored Object and set it up like you see below. We’re assuming a four-inch column on a 7.5″ wide page. You can adjust to fit your page size.

Basic settings for an anchored object

Basic settings for an anchored object

TIP: Once you have your anchored style set up the way you like, save the document you are working on.

Then close all documents and go to the Object Styles palette (with no document open). Choose Load Object Styles… from the Option Menu and add the new object style from the document you just saved and closed. Close InDesign and reopen it to save your new application default.

From then on, all new documents will have this style available. In most cases, all you will have to do it modify the offsets to make it work for any new project.

Believe me, you’ll use this (or your version of it) a lot!

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Converting book sizes easily - October 21, 2009 by David Bergsland

The other day I went through a common scenario> I had a 408 page book set up at 6×9. I found out that I needed it formatted to 4.25″ x 6.88″ for a different printer. How long do you think it took me? It became a 540 page book.

It took less than an hour.

How did it go so quickly?

Everything was formatted with styles including all the graphics. The graphics were all formatted as anchored graphics and object styles.

That hour included checking every page for orphans and widows and fixing all of them. That meant eliminating all paragraph fragments of two lines or less and all paragraph ending sentence fragments of two and a partial word or less.

The procedure

  1. Turn on Layout Adjustment… under the Layout menu in InDesign
  2. Change the page size in Document setup… under the file menu
  3. Change the margins in Margins and Columns… under the Layout menu
  4. Adjust the paragraph styles, character styles, and object styles
  5. Proof new layout from page 1 to the end eliminating orphans and widows

Like I said, it took less than a hour to convert a 540 page book. It was really fun. Yes, it was a novel we’re publishing for a new author in Peralta, New Mexico. But it doesn’t take much longer for a graphically intensive book like Practical Font Design.

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