“I see!” said the Queen, who had meanwhile been examining the roses. “Off with their heads!”
— The Queen of Hearts in Lewis Carroll's Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
In this lesson we'll examine some of the ways that typographers try to make reading much harder for learners by simplifying and stylising characters making them, in many cases, virtually unrecognisable on first encounter. But first, an anatomy lesson categorising parts of characters, before going on to see what can happen to those parts in the hands of fiendish typographers.
The designers of modern fonts strive to make the letter forms cleaner. This invariably involves reducing or eliminating the head (the small circle that one draws first when writing a character). One of three things may happen:
The head is replaced by a short line indicating the head’s original orientation The head is eliminated, but its present and orientation are indicated by a curve in its stem The head is eliminated, with no hint it was ever there
Here, the head has been replaced by a short line in all four modern fonts.
Here the head has disappeared, and the stem is bent showing that there was a head on the right.
And here the head has disappeared completely, without a trace.
In some cases the stem to which the sort line is attached is eliminated, giving forms such as
But which is which character? One way of looking at this is to imagine that the head is pushing against its stem until the stem disappears. So, the first character is ค, with the head pushing left until the stem disappears. The second is ด with the head pushing down until it meets the baseline. And the third is จ, with the head similarly pushing right.
Note that a single font may incorporate different approaches to the heads of different characters. Look at ถ ด and บ in font 3:
In font 3 the first character has the head reduced to a line, the second has the head eliminated, but hinted at by a curved stem, and the third has no evidence there ever was a head.
Now try identifying the following characters. Click on them to reveal the letter in a standard font.
(The characters are selected at random. If you reload this page the characters displayed will change.)
Intermediate loops, known as knots, are reduced to short lines, either in line with the character, or offset to one side. For example, here’s ม:
One character that invariably seems odd at first is ห. Here it is in four fonts:
Now try identifying the following characters.
The mouth of characters such as ก is either severely reduced, or eliminated completely. Here’s ก in four fonts:
Now try identifying the following characters.
Notches occur in four places:
Taking each of these in turn:
1. Notches in the neck
If the line replacing the head is anything but straight, it’s a notch. Contrast ฆ with ม
2. Notches in the top
These notches are invariably preserved. Without them, one couldn’t distinguish between, say ด and ต. Here’s ต in four fonts.
3. Notches in the bottom These notches may be preserved, or heavily modified. Here are ผ and พ in four fonts. Note that in the first two fonts, the distinction in notch height is completely lost and one must rely on the head (or absence thereof) to distinguish the characters.
4. Notches below the baseline.
ฏ and ฐ both have this type of notch. ฐ is unlikely to cause any problems in recognition. There can be difficulties however, in distinguishing between ฏ and ฎ. Here they are in four fonts:
Now try identifying the following characters.
The following characters all have tails: ชซฬศฮ. These are usually preserved, though are often reduced to a short line.
Now try identifying the following characters.
ขชซฬศฮอพฟคด
Only two characters have bases, ฐ and ญ. Note that the base of ญ is often attached to the character’s body.
Only ษ has entrails. The entrails may or may not retain a hint of its initial loop. The curve is usually straightened.
Now try identifying the following characters.
Only three characters have waists, ช, ซ and ย. Note that with ย the waist only pinches in from the left.
Now try identifying the following characters.
1. Modern Thai typography has been heavily influenced by the West. Note the following characters resemblence to a, s, w, u, and n.
2. The fonts used in this lesson are:
Font Number | Name |
---|---|
Font 0 | Noto Sans Thai |
Font 1 | JS Thannaporn Regular |
Font 2 | Sawasdee Regular |
Font 3 | Serithai Regular |
Font 4 | Mitr Regular |