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Lettering

Lettering is the art of drawing letters as visual symbols rather than using ready-made type. Unlike typography, where letters are set as standardized characters supplied by a font, lettering involves creating individual letterforms for a specific design, often composed as a complete wordmark or image. It is also distinct from handwriting and calligraphy: in lettering, the focus is on the final appearance of the letter shapes and layout, not on the act of writing with a specific stroke order.

Historically, lettering has roots in sign painting, manuscript illumination, and engraving, evolving through poster art, advertising,

Techniques and tools include pencil sketches, ink pen work, brushes, and markers for hand-drawn letters, followed

In contemporary practice, lettering spans signs, logos, posters, book jackets, and digital media. Artists may produce

and
logo
design.
In
the
late
19th
and
20th
centuries,
artists
and
studios
developed
display
lettering
as
a
deliberate
graphic
craft,
later
embraced
by
modern
graphic
design
and
its
demand
for
unique
branding.
by
tracing
or
scanning
and
digital
refinement.
Layout
skills
such
as
spacing,
alignment,
and
proportion
are
essential,
as
is
an
eye
for
legibility
at
different
sizes.
Styles
vary
from
serif,
sans
serif,
and
script
to
decorative
display
faces,
each
often
tailored
to
a
specific
project.
Knowledge
of
flourishes,
ligatures,
and
maintaining
consistency
across
a
design
are
common
concerns.
hand-lettered
pieces
that
are
later
vectorized
for
scalable
use,
or
create
fully
digital
lettering
from
the
start.
The
field
emphasizes
craft,
originality,
and
clear
visual
communication
within
a
given
brief.