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Practical Typographic Advice and Building an Education Business Alongside a Design Firm with Michael Stinson
Manage episode 166799423 series 125467
Michael Stinson (@MWStinson) is a veteran designer, educator, and business owner. In addition to his work as a professor of graphic design, he also runs Ramp Creative, a branding studio in Los Angeles, as well as Type Ed, a dedicated typographic education business which helps creative pros return to form in the fields of typesetting and layout.
Together in this conversation we unravel some of today’s worst typographic habits, and how to overcome them, share a few tips that all creatives can use to improve their type usage, and discuss some processes for working with clients.
Catch up with Michael on his website, MichaelStinson.com, or through Type Ed.
Get The Episode
- Download The Busy Creator Podcast, episode 97 (MP3, 52:40, 25.4 MB)
- Download The Busy Creator Podcast, episode 97 (OGG, 52:40, 22 MB)
Subscribe to The Busy Creator Podcast on iTunes, on Google Play Music, on Android, on iHeart
SponsorFreedcamp, the finest free online project management software
Bandwidth for The Busy Creator Podcast is provided by Freedcamp, Group Efforts Made Effortless.
Freedcamp is best free online project management software available. By using the built-in functions and additional tools like time tracking, invoices, milestones, file storage, and more, teams can customise the software for the task at hand! The Busy Creator Podcast itself is managed and operated on Freedcamp. Get started for free on Freedcamp.com
Show Notes & Links- Michael is the first person from Los Angeles to join The Busy Creator Podcast
- Ramp Creative handles a lot of variety — digital, print, mobile
- Type Ed is an Education Organization, founded 2012
- UI/UX design has eroded traditional type study
- High School scribbles are largely typography
- Michael was taught both ends of the type spectrum — hand lettering and typesetting (3 words or 300)
"I'm not training you to be designers; I'm training you to be Creative Directors some day."
—Michael Stinson
- Phonetics
- Whiskey Labels, an underrated technical as well as artistic challenge
"Everyone likes to do logos but wordmarks are extremely challenging."
—Michael Stinson
- Chronicle Books
- Typography for Lawyers, great site for anyone, not just lawers
"Designers these days don't like process. They want to jump to making it look good."
—Michael Stinson
"If you get your process in place, you can design anything."
—Michael Stinson
- Michael is a former Aerospace Engineer; Prescott studied Mechanical Engineering
- Prescott — in spite of the hyphen in his last name — doesn’t like to use hyphens in his paragraph text
"Imagine if you're reading War & Peace in all caps — how far would you get?"
—Michael Stinson
- Milton Glaser’s Bob Dylan poster
Bob Dylan by Milton Glaser
- Michael was accepted to study Physics at Berkeley, but received scholarships in Art
"The beauty of graphic design is that it works both sides of the brain."
—Michael Stinson
- Additive & Subtractive Colours
- Lithographic printing
- Calculus
- Ramp Creative is 2 principals and 1 designer
"If you follow the right words the path will take you to the promised land of the visuals."
—Michael Stinson
- Different methodologies — layer cake vs. pay-as-you-go
- Lots of Jewish families in New York City worked in the garment industry
"You're an actor, you're a leader, you're an entrepreneur, you're a psychologist, you're a therapist ... all at the same time."
—Michael Stinson
- Building Brands, a Step-By-Step Guide for Creative Pros to Develop Strategy and Design Identity — original eBook by Prescott Perez-Fox
Building Brands eBook
"You're not going to use a crescent wrench for a hammer. Right tool for the right job."
—Michael Stinson
"Never stop noticing design."
—Michael Stinson
- The most stringest morning routine ever described on The Busy Creator Podcast was that of Michael Bierut
- Reading in The Brain by Stanislas Dehaene on Amazon
- The Intellectual Devotional by David Kidder & Noah Oppenheim on Amazon and on Audible
"Type isn't all about the characters themselves, it's about the space they take up and the negative space that's left."
—Michael Stinson
- Michael defines himself as an introvert
- Douglas Davis, another educator to appear as a guest
- Cat Rose discussed creative introverts on The Busy Creator Podcast
- Type Ed
- MichaelStinson.com
- RampCreative.com
- Michael Stinson on Twitter
- Michael Stinson on Facebook
- Michael Stinson on Instagram
- Michael Stinson on LinkedIn
- Type Ed on Twitter
- Type Ed on Facebook
- Use Tables in InDesign for grid-based layouts (restaurant menus)
- Build type hierarchy from the body copy up (subheads, etc.)
- If you’re setting more than 35 words, don’t use All Caps, Italics, Centered
- Don’t be afraid to use hyphens, but with discipline. (e.g., don’t use hyphens in the first line)
- Don’t use more than 13 words on a line (left-aligned), or 7 words on a line (centered)
- Aim for 50-70 characters per line (type size in points x 2 = measure width in picas)
- Don’t build websites in Photoshop — it’s not made for layout
- Keep the reader in your mind. Think of them first.
- Always take clients through a verbal discovery phase first before visuals
- Give your print partners multiple files — flattened, outlined, original files, native links, etc. — make their lives easier
- Constantly observe and comment on design around you
Visit BusyCreatorBook.com for your free trial
Get The Intellectual Devotional Modern Culture: Revive Your Mind by David Kidder & Noah Oppenheim as a free audiobook
104 episode
Manage episode 166799423 series 125467
Michael Stinson (@MWStinson) is a veteran designer, educator, and business owner. In addition to his work as a professor of graphic design, he also runs Ramp Creative, a branding studio in Los Angeles, as well as Type Ed, a dedicated typographic education business which helps creative pros return to form in the fields of typesetting and layout.
Together in this conversation we unravel some of today’s worst typographic habits, and how to overcome them, share a few tips that all creatives can use to improve their type usage, and discuss some processes for working with clients.
Catch up with Michael on his website, MichaelStinson.com, or through Type Ed.
Get The Episode
- Download The Busy Creator Podcast, episode 97 (MP3, 52:40, 25.4 MB)
- Download The Busy Creator Podcast, episode 97 (OGG, 52:40, 22 MB)
Subscribe to The Busy Creator Podcast on iTunes, on Google Play Music, on Android, on iHeart
SponsorFreedcamp, the finest free online project management software
Bandwidth for The Busy Creator Podcast is provided by Freedcamp, Group Efforts Made Effortless.
Freedcamp is best free online project management software available. By using the built-in functions and additional tools like time tracking, invoices, milestones, file storage, and more, teams can customise the software for the task at hand! The Busy Creator Podcast itself is managed and operated on Freedcamp. Get started for free on Freedcamp.com
Show Notes & Links- Michael is the first person from Los Angeles to join The Busy Creator Podcast
- Ramp Creative handles a lot of variety — digital, print, mobile
- Type Ed is an Education Organization, founded 2012
- UI/UX design has eroded traditional type study
- High School scribbles are largely typography
- Michael was taught both ends of the type spectrum — hand lettering and typesetting (3 words or 300)
"I'm not training you to be designers; I'm training you to be Creative Directors some day."
—Michael Stinson
- Phonetics
- Whiskey Labels, an underrated technical as well as artistic challenge
"Everyone likes to do logos but wordmarks are extremely challenging."
—Michael Stinson
- Chronicle Books
- Typography for Lawyers, great site for anyone, not just lawers
"Designers these days don't like process. They want to jump to making it look good."
—Michael Stinson
"If you get your process in place, you can design anything."
—Michael Stinson
- Michael is a former Aerospace Engineer; Prescott studied Mechanical Engineering
- Prescott — in spite of the hyphen in his last name — doesn’t like to use hyphens in his paragraph text
"Imagine if you're reading War & Peace in all caps — how far would you get?"
—Michael Stinson
- Milton Glaser’s Bob Dylan poster
Bob Dylan by Milton Glaser
- Michael was accepted to study Physics at Berkeley, but received scholarships in Art
"The beauty of graphic design is that it works both sides of the brain."
—Michael Stinson
- Additive & Subtractive Colours
- Lithographic printing
- Calculus
- Ramp Creative is 2 principals and 1 designer
"If you follow the right words the path will take you to the promised land of the visuals."
—Michael Stinson
- Different methodologies — layer cake vs. pay-as-you-go
- Lots of Jewish families in New York City worked in the garment industry
"You're an actor, you're a leader, you're an entrepreneur, you're a psychologist, you're a therapist ... all at the same time."
—Michael Stinson
- Building Brands, a Step-By-Step Guide for Creative Pros to Develop Strategy and Design Identity — original eBook by Prescott Perez-Fox
Building Brands eBook
"You're not going to use a crescent wrench for a hammer. Right tool for the right job."
—Michael Stinson
"Never stop noticing design."
—Michael Stinson
- The most stringest morning routine ever described on The Busy Creator Podcast was that of Michael Bierut
- Reading in The Brain by Stanislas Dehaene on Amazon
- The Intellectual Devotional by David Kidder & Noah Oppenheim on Amazon and on Audible
"Type isn't all about the characters themselves, it's about the space they take up and the negative space that's left."
—Michael Stinson
- Michael defines himself as an introvert
- Douglas Davis, another educator to appear as a guest
- Cat Rose discussed creative introverts on The Busy Creator Podcast
- Type Ed
- MichaelStinson.com
- RampCreative.com
- Michael Stinson on Twitter
- Michael Stinson on Facebook
- Michael Stinson on Instagram
- Michael Stinson on LinkedIn
- Type Ed on Twitter
- Type Ed on Facebook
- Use Tables in InDesign for grid-based layouts (restaurant menus)
- Build type hierarchy from the body copy up (subheads, etc.)
- If you’re setting more than 35 words, don’t use All Caps, Italics, Centered
- Don’t be afraid to use hyphens, but with discipline. (e.g., don’t use hyphens in the first line)
- Don’t use more than 13 words on a line (left-aligned), or 7 words on a line (centered)
- Aim for 50-70 characters per line (type size in points x 2 = measure width in picas)
- Don’t build websites in Photoshop — it’s not made for layout
- Keep the reader in your mind. Think of them first.
- Always take clients through a verbal discovery phase first before visuals
- Give your print partners multiple files — flattened, outlined, original files, native links, etc. — make their lives easier
- Constantly observe and comment on design around you
Visit BusyCreatorBook.com for your free trial
Get The Intellectual Devotional Modern Culture: Revive Your Mind by David Kidder & Noah Oppenheim as a free audiobook
104 episode
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