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Reddit mentions of Making and Breaking the Grid: A Graphic Design Layout Workshop: A Layout Design Workshop

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of Making and Breaking the Grid: A Graphic Design Layout Workshop: A Layout Design Workshop. Here are the top ones.

Making and Breaking the Grid: A Graphic Design Layout Workshop: A Layout Design Workshop
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Release dateMay 2005

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Found 3 comments on Making and Breaking the Grid: A Graphic Design Layout Workshop: A Layout Design Workshop:

u/The_Dead_See · 9 pointsr/graphic_design

Making and breaking the grid by Timothy Samara is pretty much the definitive practical reference imo.

And if you want to get a little more into the depth and history, Grid Systems by Brockmann of course.

u/Swisst · 4 pointsr/design_critiques

Without going into a lot of details, I would really suggest taking some time to study design fundamentals. A lot of your work looks like it stems from quick experiments with filters and various online tutorials. A better understanding of type, space, hierarchy, etc. will take you far.

Books like Thinking with Type, [Don't Make Me Think] (http://amzn.com/0321965515), and Making and Breaking the Grid would be a great place to start. Buy those—or get them from a library—and read them cover to cover.

u/Jardun · 2 pointsr/Design

I seem to get asked this a lot, but here is my list, posted here:

http://www.reddit.com/r/graphic_design/comments/1uq58s/good_graphic_design_books_for_a_beginner/ceklj3y



> These are all books that I absolutly love, and bought for either personal use or to accompany different courses while I was getting my BFA in GD. I have seen some of them both are brick and mortar book stores, and college book stores. If you get a chance to see them in person before buying, leaf through them to get a feel.
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> Megg's History of Graphic Design, absolutely essential to understanding where graphic design comes from historically. IMO the best GD history book on the market, at least the most encompassing. One of my favorites, was very helpful writing different papers and researching historical styles.
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Graphic Design School. Another great book, focuses more on design process and stuff like that. This one more walks you though being a designer. Gives tutorials on different things too, which is useful.
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> Graphic Design Referenced is a really great book that is a bit of a hybrid. This book describes a lot of design terms, styles, and general knowledge while referring to historical and modern examples.
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> Those three for me are really essential books for new graphic designers, I learned more from those three than I can express. Below are a few more books I really like, but might be a bit more advanced than someone just getting started might want.
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Another book I have used a lot, and almost included with those three is above. Thinking with Type. Really great intro into typography.
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> More advanced even.
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> How to be a Graphic Designer without Losing Your Soul
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A Graphic Design Student's Guide to Freelance
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> Hope this helps!
>

Keep in mind this is just a starting point. There are tons upon tons of inspiration books out there for graphic design stuff, not to mention educational books on all sorts of specialties. I love graphic design books, the hard physical copy of them. When I'm stuck on a project I like to flip through them, read a bit, and then revisit my work again.

Here are the books currently in my amazon wishlist, so I can't vouch for them, but I do plan on eventually owning them.

Wish List: