I have chosen Bodycopy for my second word.
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"Main text found in publications we read. Bodycopy is the text of the stories and articles. It is usually between 8 and 14 points in size. Readability is the key to selecting fonts for bodycopy."
So far I am thinking of using bodycopy of newspaper cuttings, which I would use in a context other than a publication i.e. booklet, magazine, spread etc... |
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Text is usually found just about everywhere; although on publicity items it is usually no more than a few words or a sentence as the message needs to be understood fast; which is why I thought it may be interesting to put large amount of text on a product not initially designed for this purpose.
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Other 3D formats to consider: boxes. On the inside newspaper clippings. The outside would have the definition of bodycopy. On the lid, I want the letters BODYCOPY to have bodycopy inside them... I know how to do it with Photoshop...but that is too easy so I will try manually and compare both results.
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The process to get there was quite lengthy... but each letter holds enough text to be "passed on" as bodycopy... now how about the computerised version?
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This looks much cleaner (not to mention it can be achieved very quickly!) and I guess it looks at least as good as the handmade one...could definitely do with more text. Now about mixing them up? |
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I think this one with some work would probably be better than the two above. It is the handmade version scanned in; as it is now computerised, it offers some flexibility and potential. |
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