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miércoles, 26 de febrero de 2014

The science behind fonts (and how they make you feel)

Fuente: thenextweb
Mikael Cho is the co-founder of ooomf, a network that connects short-term software projects with handpicked developers and designers. Mikael writes about psychology, startups, and product marketing over on the ooomf blog.

I’ve noticed how seemingly small things like font and the spacing between letters can impact how I feel when reading online.
The right font choice along with the absence of sidebars and popups makes everything feel easier and better to read.
Websites like MediumSignal vs. Noise, and Zen Habits are like yoga studios for content. Their presentation of content puts me at peace while reading, allowing me to fully focus on the stories without distraction.
Just look at the difference between Medium and Cracked:
Exhibit A) Medium.com
Exhibit B) Cracked.com
When you compare the two, it’s obvious which one makes you feel like crud.
The Cracked layout is painful to look at. Your eyes squint and dart, constantly second-guessing what you’re reading now with what you should be reading next.
After experimenting with how we display content on the ooomf blog, I discovered there’s an element of science behind why we feel this way toward certain typefaces and layouts.

How we read

When we read, our eyes follow a natural pattern called a Scan Path.
We break sentences up into scans (saccades) and pauses (fixations). Here’s theScan Path for a typical reader:
Your eyes typically move across a page for between 7 to 9 letters before needing to pause to process what you’re reading. As you scan a sentence, no useful visual processing is happening in your brain. Visual processing is completely dependent upon the information taken in when you pause.
So why does this matter? Understanding the way we read is important for designing how words look because you can directly impact someone’s connection to your writing with the right font and layout.

Why the right font layout makes you feel good

When I set out to write this post, I wasn’t sure I’d find scientific backing for why we feel a certain way toward certain fonts.
I thought choosing font was mostly art, with a sprinkle of science.
That was until I came across a study by psychologist Kevin Larson. Larson has spent his career researching typefaces and recently conducted a landmark study at MIT about how font and layout affect our emotions.
In the study, 20 volunteers – half men and half women – were separated into two groups. Each group was shown a separate version of The New Yorker – one where the image placement, font, and layout were designed well and one where the layout was designed poorly:
The researchers found that readers felt bad while reading the poorly designed layout. Sometimes, this feeling would be expressed physically with a frown.
The corrugator supercilii facial muscles that help produce a frown have been linked to the amygdala, an area of your brain responsible for emotion.
Meanwhile, the participants who read content from the good reading layout, felt like it took less time to read and felt better.
People exposed to the well-designed layout were found to have higher cognitive focus, more efficient mental processes, and a stronger sense of clarity.
The researchers concluded that well-designed reading environments don’t necessarily help you understand what you’re reading better, but they do make you feel good, causing you to feel inspired and more likely to take action.

Culture impacts your preference for fonts

One explanation for why some fonts make you feel a certain way is because of deep links in culture.
For instance, Courier fonts were designed to resemble old memos written on type writers:
Many people relate Helvetica with the US Government because it’s used in tax forms.
These associations are difficult to remove and should be considered when deciding on a font choice. Here’s how Bank of America’s website would look with the Impact font associated with News headlines:
Original Bank of America website:
Bank of America website with Impact font (associated with newspaper headlines):

When the fonts are changed to Impact, Bank of America doesn’t exactly seem trustworthy.
Because fonts are designed by humans, there is usually some meaning attached to them. You don’t want to choose a font that is easily associated with something in our culture that’s markedly different than the vibe you’re trying to give off.

How to design better content

The quality of your content is the most important thing but how you present that content by choosing the right font and layout still has its place.
As French poet Paul Claudel put it, “The secret of type is that it speaks.”
So how can you design your words to help elicit positive feelings in people? Here’s a few techniques from typography experts that you might find useful:
1. Choose an anchor font
Type designer Jessica Hische recommends first selecting a typeface for the content that is most prevalent in your project (most likely your body copy).
This will be the typeface that you base your other font decisions on like headlines and subheads.
There’s four main categories of fonts to choose from:
Serif Fonts – Letters with short lines coming off the edges. Viewed as more formal and traditional. Best suited for print.
  • Sans-serif Fonts – Letters without serifs. Viewed as informal and playful. Best suited for digital.
  • Script Fonts – Resembles handwriting and often used in formal invitations. Not ideal for body copy.
  • Decorative Fonts – Informal fonts viewed as original. Best suited for headlines but not body copy.
For reading on the Web, it’s best to stay away from script or decorative typefaces. Most Script and Decorative fonts have low legibility which slows down your reading because you are busy trying to figure out what letters are.
You don’t want your readers asking, “was that an ‘a’ or an ‘e’” every word.
If you’re scrunching your eyes trying to figure out a word that’s a signal that your brain is dedicating unnecessary energy to identifying words.
Decorative typefaces should be used for content that is meant to be seen at a glance, like in a logo, rather than read as multiple paragraphs in body text.
When choosing a font for body text, it’s usually best to stick with a Serif font or Sans-serif font.
Some typography experts recommend sans-serif fonts for reading online because the quality of screen resolutions is less than in print. But, as screen resolutions dramatically improve, Serif fonts are becoming easier to read on the Web. Content-heavy websites like Medium use a Serif font (probably to give off the vibe of a print editorial).
The most important thing with choosing a font is to make sure the letters are easily decipherable from one another so your readers don’t have to spend precious mental energy identifying letters.
There’s a trick that Hische uses to make sure your font choice is a good one. She recommends that you make your fonts pass the Il1 test:
2. Pick a font size bigger than 12pt
In 1929, a study was conducted called the “Hygiene of reading.” One thing researchers were trying to determine was which font size would be best for reading. The study looked at 6pt, 8pt, 10pt, 12pt, and 14pt type sizes.
The researchers concluded that a font size of 10pt font is the most efficient for reading but a lot has changed in how we consume content today compared to the 1920s.
However, as more reading shifts to digital and screen resolutions improve, the way we read content is changing. Many designers mention that 16pt font is the new 12pt font. A recent study has also shown that larger font sizes can elicit a stronger emotional connection.
Medium has one of my favorite reading environments online and they use a 22pt font size. Several of my other favorite websites have adopted a font size over 20pt for their content:
  • Medium – 22pt
  • 37Signals: Signal vs. Noise – 22pt
  • Zen Habits – 21pt
While having a huge font over 30pt most likely wouldn’t make sense, many blogs have font in the 10pt-12pt range. Try increasing your font size. If you’re using 12pt font, try increasing to 16pt font. If you’re using 18pt font increase to 22pt.
You can feel the difference.
3. Watch your line length
The line length is how far your sentences stretch across the page. The ideal line length should be between about 50 to 75 characters.
Here’s an example of the longest line length from Zen Habits. It’s 78 characters, about 6.5 inches:

This line length has been shown to be most effective in helping readers move through their Scan Path.
If the line length is too short, your reader’s rhythm will break because their eyes must travel back to the left of the page too often.
A line length that is too long makes it hard to find where lines of text start and end. It can make it difficult for your reader to get to the next line without accidentally jumping to the wrong place.
Research shows that your subconscious mind gets a boost of energy when jumping to a new line (as long as it doesn’t happen too often) but this energy dwindles as you read over the duration of the line.
Here’s the line lengths from the sites mentioned above:
  • Medium – 75 characters
  • 37Signals: Signal vs. Noise – 76 characters
  • Zen Habits – 78 characters
4. Mind your spacing
Adequate spacing between letters is important for your readers to be able to move through sentences fluidly. The tighter your letters are together, the harder it is for people to identify the shapes that make up different letterforms.
Take a look at another example from Jessica Hische of the readability of Helvetica versus Avenir. Hische recommends Avenir because of its more open spacing:

Proper spacing makes your readers feel good. Here’s 5 recommended font combinations from Google Web Fonts that have good spacing for reading long blocks of content.
I decided to put these tips into practice with our ooomf email newsletter campaign. Here’s a comparison between our original campaign and our new design:

By changing the font and increasing its size, our email content felt much better.
Packaging content the right way is important and knowing why we feel the way we do about the look of content will hopefully help next time you design content for a project. As Aarron Walter, author of Designing for Emotion, writes,
“People will forgive shortcomings, follow your lead, and sing your praises if you reward them with positive emotion.”
It’s important to remember that while there is a science connected to how your words are designed, no amount of good design can save bad content.
Write well first. Design well second.

lunes, 4 de marzo de 2013

WHY I HATE INSIGHTS

iiex-saopaulo.com

By Suzana Pamplona of Johnson & Johnson. Suzana will be speaking at the Insight Innovation Exchange São Paulo.

I’ve always detested the word insights. I find it pretentious and shallow. I could not tell exactly why I felt that way. You might say that having a researcher soul, with a curious spirit, my job is to question everything, myself included.

Raising some hypothesis and then starting from the etymology of the word as part of my natural process of investigation, I’ve discovered that in + sight came from Middle English, related to a sense of ‘inner sight, wisdom’, something like “a sight with the eyes of the mind”, a mental vision or understanding. Sight, in turn, is defined as “perception or apprehension by means of the eyes” related to gesiht, gesihð which means “thing seen” in Old English.

Really? That intrigued me: something divine or related to a hidden nature? Something that can be seen? I also discovered that in Psychiatry it means the awareness, by a mentally ill person, that their mental experiences are not based on the external reality.



I truly believe that words matter and so I started to feel even worse about this particular one. I really could not relate what we have been recently doing in the contemporary, or so called new market research, with something close to just an inner, personal or divine vision.

Our main job is actually to dig into the rich reality that surrounds us, into what is out there, and not into ourselves, based on our umbilical thoughts. Our main source is that world of vast information and experiences which we observe, select, structure, analyze, interpret and present to cause impact in our fields. That inner orientation has little to do with an art that is all about interaction with the real world. Besides that, what we discover, in many cases, cannot be seen or apprehended without a foundation which enables us to see the invisible to hasty eyes.

Some might say that the insights term is a tentative to confront a positivist and mechanical way of defining what we do, to avoid the idea that this area could be completely neutral as pure science claims to be. As mature, honest and confident people, we are not afraid to admit that “there is no fact, just interpretation” in every field. And that is why insight seems to be an unfortunate term to describe what our job is.

After working for more than 20 years in this industry and having heard many tentative to explain and better sell what we do, I’ve got to enlightenment: if nothing were fact, but interpretation, what we do it is calledcuration. By Oxford this means: select, organize and present, using professional or expert knowledge.

In a world of information avalanche, one of the hardest parts of one’s job is to filter, to decide what to see and, mainly, what not to. For the sociologist Max Weber, our job is to unite the chaos of reality into understandable concepts, i.e., we must mine data to create meaning.

It is not about inner sight. Actually, behind every apparent “eureka” lays a lot of investigation and accumulated knowledge. Archimedes didn’t get to his theory just because he took a bath neither did Newtown on the day the apple felt on his head. Many others could have seen that, but they were the ones who had accumulated an arsenal of knowledge to get there.

I prefer to believe that we are not merely an area not just insights generators or guardians. We shouldn’t hold the power of information or make it restricted to few. It is about the opposite. Our party should have asense of influence and access. We are about creating impact for new perspectives, which could only happen if we really help to expand the cognitive universe of those we work with. I’d rather see us as champions of the knowledge democracy, shared with all.

Our purpose must be in service of the human cognitive expansion, sharing knowledge and providing the tools to a friendly access to it, so people could be better empowered to make their own synapses. Ultimately, we must inspire and influence meaningful decisions.

In this sense, I invite you to see ourselves as creators of meaning, to go beyond punctual information and anecdotal stories. We must generate sapientem, sapere which is related to “tasting” knowledge that ignites enlightenment, the one that brings light to uncovered opportunities.

I invite you to be knowledge curators, from Latin curare ‘take care of’ and from cura ‘care’, because we do care, we are concern about our impact. We have a responsibility.

miércoles, 21 de noviembre de 2012

Coca Cola se vuelve fashion


En dias pasados, se realizó el Fashion Rio, en donde Coca Cola revelo modelos de prendas de vestir para la temporada 2013.

No es la primera vez que Coca Cola incursiona en el mundo de la moda, según HuhMagazine, ya la gaseosa mas famosa del mundo, trabajo por el año 2008 con un diseñador de modas llamado Trais Rossiter, haciendo su debut en Rio. Las críticas para ese entonces no fueron buenas, ahora esperemos como los tratan los criticos de la moda.

Hasta ahora no es claro si estas prendas estarán disponibles al público.









martes, 13 de noviembre de 2012

Microsoft te tira una pared encima


Una reciente campaña viral de Microsoft para promocionar su nuevo sistema Windows 8, realizado en Noruega, tiene como objetivo la diversión y el entretenimiento que puedes obtener con este nuevo sistema operativo.


Esperando con este video, que sea retrasmitido por todas las redes sociales, Microsoft realiza esta campaña con el objetivo de demostrar las capacidades que tiene Windows 8 para hacerte pasar un buen rato.

Con este cambio de estrategia, ha dado como resultado una nueva imagen corporativa tanto para Microsoft como para Windows, de un excelente rendimiento a largo plazo.

jueves, 1 de noviembre de 2012

Las 10 marcas simples a nivel mundial


La agencia de branding Siegel+Gale, publico su listado de las 10 marcas mas simples alrededor del mundo. Las marcas fueron evaluadas según su simplicidad/complejidad en el servicio, producto, interacciones y comunicaciones en relación con otras empresas del sector.

Según su reporte las diez primeras marcas fueron: Google, McDonald's, IKEA, C&A, Apple, Pizza Hut, Nokia, Yahoo!, Carrefour y ALDI.

Tomando como referencia países como: USA, UK, Alemania, Medio Oriente, India y China.

Formaron una construcción de percepciones basadas en distintos campos de la industria como: entretenimiento, viajes, renta de internet, restaurantes, medios, educación, etc.

Les invitamos a que se descargen el archivo en esta dirección: http://www.siegelgale.com/

miércoles, 31 de octubre de 2012

Stefan Sagmeister - Diseño y Felicidad


Tuve la oportunidad de asistir a la conferencia del aclamado diseñador y artista visual mundialmente conocido Stefan Sagmeister sobre el Diseño y la Felicidad.

Explico claramente la necesidad de incursionar al mundo del diseño gráfico y ademas de ello de motivar a cada asistente a buscar nuestro lado mas feliz de poder realizar nuestro trabajo, que es tan complicado como el de un operador de maquinaria, un doctor o una enfermera. 





Cada diseñador tiene su estilo propio y único sobre los trabajos que realiza, en este caso Sagmeister nos trató de demostrar ese lado, de poder llegar a conseguir lo que anhelamos en el trabajo diaria y en la felicidad de poder realizar lo que nos gusta. 

Sagmeister de ascendencia austriaca, se caracterizado por llevar sus trabajos fuera de lo común y de presentarse como una obra digna de admirar.

Mantiene un estudio en la ciudad de Nueva York, recientemente se asocio con Jessica Walsh, otra excelente diseñadora.


Menciono que el diseñador, debería tener la posibilidad de poder acortar el tiempo que uno tiene para jubilarse y enseñó una linea del tiempo en el cual se debería de ir dividiendo poco a poco el tiempo que se trabaja para tomar uno o dos años sabáticos. Los cuales, en ese tiempo, se mantiene trabajando en proyectos visuales y sin dejar de ser lo que es, un diseñador.




Les dejo un pequeño listado, en donde muestra lo que desea realizar.



Uno debe de gustarle lo que hace, porque es algo que se debe de repetir todos los días.

viernes, 14 de septiembre de 2012

USA Today celebra sus 30 años



El diario norteamericano celebra sus 30 años de fundación, presentando su nueva imagen corporativa, que va desde un nuevo diseño editorial, sitio web y ademas su logotipo.


Señala su fundador Al Neuharth : “servir como un foro para el mejor entendimiento y unidad  y hacer de USA verdaderamente una nación”

Logotipo anterior



 

lunes, 10 de septiembre de 2012

Gafa futuristas de Google llegaron a la pasarela de NY

SerPeruano.com
La semana de la moda de Nueva York ha servido de plataforma de presentación de las gafas de realidad aumentada de Google. Las Project Glass se utilizaron en la Fashion Week para grabar el desfile de la diseñadora Diane von Furstenberg. Las gafas no sólo lucieron como un complemento más, sino que también se mostraron por primera vez en un evento ajeno a la tecnología.



Las modelos lucieron por primera vez el Head-Up Display, una pequeña pantalla de visualización frontal que, situada frente a uno de los ojos, muestra información y permite realizar grabaciones.
El cortometraje grabado a través de las gafas de realidad aumentada de Google no podrá verse hasta el próximo 13 de septiembre, pero es el resultado de un conjunto de imágenes tomadas a partir de las gafas Project Glass de las modelos.
Las gafas de realidad aumentada fueron una de las novedades presentadas por Google durante la conferencia anual I/O celebrada a finales de junio. Un dispositivo que se ofrece a los desarrolladores por un precio de 1.500 dólares y que es casi un ‘smartphone’ pero en forma de gafas. Las Project Glass tienen un ‘touchpad’ en un lateral, micrófono, auriculares, giroscopio y procesador y una de sus principales ventajas es que permite grabar imágenes y proyectarlas.


miércoles, 5 de septiembre de 2012

Bolso Chihuahua

Un particular diseño para bolso, LV, se ha presentado en estos dias.

Creado por la artista Meryl Smith.