Real World Adobe Creative Suite 2
Text on the printed page and all around us in our daily life is a prime means of communicating. And type how text is presented directly affects its message, just as a suit of clothes identifies its wearer. Graphics can grab our attention and perhaps rouse our emotions, but when we really want to find out about a subject, we want to read the text. Text is the stream of characters that fills the text frames in the Adobe Creative Suite 2 applications InDesign CS2, Illustrator CS2, and Photoshop CS2 and are incorporated in the web pages created by GoLive CS2. Each of these applications give you a range of tools for creating, importing, and editing text, manipulating text frames, checking spelling, and so on. The Creative Suite applications don't just work with text like a word-processing application. They also let you format the text in powerful ways, and add the typographic refinements that can make it compelling. One of the ways they do this is by giving you access to all of the features of fonts, which are one of the building blocks of graphic design. In this chapter, we'll show you how Adobe has continued a tradition of high-quality type in Adobe Creative Suite 2, begun when Adobe first developed PostScript, a page-description language that is a cornerstone of digital publishing. Here are some of the text and type features we'll cover:
In this chapter we'll be focusing on the text and type features of Adobe InDesign, Illustrator, and Photoshop. See "Cascading Style Sheets" in Chapter 8, "Working with Style," for information about working with type and cascading style sheets in GoLive CS2. |