Tag: TODAY

The Best Newspapers Are Toilet Papers

The test for how good a newspaper is, according to TODAY’s Design Editor Edric Sng, is how well it fares in the toilet. The writing must be good enough to sustain a “good long shit” and it has to be comfortable to hold. That is why he prefers the tabloid-size of TODAY, the broadsheet size, he says, is just too cumbersome for a readership that is pressed for time. He recalls how his father started stapling his copy of the broadsheet, The Straits Times (ST) last year. “It’s quite geeky, but it really works.” says the 29-year-old, and so he introduced it to TODAY too.

The former sociology graduate of the National University of Singapore first wet his toes in the media industry when he wrote part-time for Fins Magazine, a local diving magazine. Sng became its Editor even before he graduated but soon got tired of doing everything — writing, editing, designing, marketing — as it was a small magazine. He then applied to be a sub-editor at both ST and TODAY, choosing to join the latter and eventually rising up the be its Design Editor today.

He readily admits his lack of credentials but says, “Do you know why people become newspaper designers? Because they are not good enough to be designers for other media.” For Sng, newspaper designers need to balance editorial with design, “(Our) strength is at least 50 per cent words.” he says.

For someone whose job is mainly to design, Sng spends more than half the time talking about words. He bemoans ST’s headlines. “Our headlines are harder to think of than ST’s headlines. We try to be a bit more clever.” he says as he flips through today’s edition for an example.

Instead, he finds himself muttering page-after-page, “That is a ST headline” and quickly apologises, “We tried to do more last time although we seemed to have gotten quite plowed under by work… who the hell wrote these headlines?” he exclaims. An ST headline, according to Sng, is “straight” as compared to what his 12 subs in TODAY have to come up with, “We like to put sex in our headlines.” he says.

Sng is also worried about the poor writing in Singapore journalism as many writers seem to lack a soul in their articles, and to him, it doesn’t matter how good a design is if the content does not match up. He cites former TODAY writers Clement Mesenas and P N Balji as well as former-ST journalist Cherian George as writers he likes to read.

To him the relationship between text and design is crucial for newspapers, “I think designers should be very much more concious about words than what people normally think.” he explains. “The content, and the sound and style should forge how your paper looks and not the other way around.” This desire to visualise a paper’s “voice” is why TODAY uses certain typefaces and looks this way, “A broadsheet-level respect for readers but with a tabloid finish”, he says.

In the next part of this interview, The Paginator asks Edric about redesigning TODAY and finds out why ST has it easy in news design.

Interpreting Typefaces of Singapore’s Newspaper Nameplates

A few posts ago, I introduced the typefaces of Singapore’s English newspaper nameplates and who else uses them. This time, I’ll interpret them and see if they might mean anything at all!

seeingnewspapers0002Barnhurst’s Seeing The Newspaper is a great book on visual journalism and in one chapter, he looks at typography and meaning through a typeface’s origins in history and its use in that society.

The meanings assigned to type by readers and typographers seem to spring not form some objective code but from the cultural experience common to both groups.
Barnhurst, Seeing The Newspaper, p.155

With his words in mind, here is my take on the nameplates!

stnameplate

Typeface: Big Caslon (Straits Times)

Based on a humanistic handwriting by printers in Italy before 1500, Big Caslon is a modern day recreation of the original typeface by William Caslon of England in 1725. Back then, Caslon was very popular and even used in the US Declaration of Independence. The saying went, “when in doubt, use Caslon”. It seems appropriate for ST to use such a historic and serious typeface as “the paper of record” but it is also a safe and un-imaginative choice.

todaynameplate

Typeface: Times New Roman

The default typeface in Microsoft Word for several years, Times New Roman was created by Stanely Morison and Victor Lardent for London’s The Times newspaper in 1931. It’s hard to go wrong with a typeface designed for newspapers but its ubiquity also suggests that TODAY was not really thinking out of the box. And for some reason, to be a serious newspaper here, you have to use a British typeface.

tnpnameplate

Typeface: Helvetica Neue (The New Paper)

Perhaps the most well-known popular typeface today, Helvetica was created as a neutral sans serif typeface that had great clarity and no intrinsic meaning. Indeed, TNP’s choice of this Swiss typeface reflects its readership and news — simple and familiar to the masses. There is no need for frills when this tabloid’s content is already full of sex, violence, gossip, soccer…

btnameplate

Typeface: Frutiger

Sans serif typefaces, like this one, came about in the 19th century and was first used in advertising displays. This particular one is another Swiss typeface and designed by Adrian Frutiger for directional signs for an international airport in France.

What better way to report about business by using a typeface they made their own? This one has an international appeal to boot too.

btweekendnameplate

Typeface: Freight Sans

Being part of The Business Times, this nameplate cannot deviate a lot from its main paper. The choice of this pretty new typeface seems like a update with the times plus a touch of lightness for the weekend crowd. The typeface’s creator Joshua Darden says Freight Sans is “designed for warm formality in text and an authoritative, helpful tone in display” — indeed.

mypapernameplate

Typeface: Myriad

Used by Apple Computer since 2002, this paper probably wants to identify itself with the younger generation, so speak the language of one of the most popular brands amongst the youth today?

sundaytimesnameplate

Typeface: TheSans

It’s Sunday and the last thing you want is to be greeted by a serious paper the first thing in the morning. Thus, the choice of this typeface by Dutch designer Luc(as) de Groot seems appropriate since it is marketed as a “useful-yet-friendly, all-purpose contemporary sans-serif”. Until you realise it is also “the face of thousands of organisations, publications and web sites”, but then it has to stay safe like its main paper, The Straits Times, too.

Typefaces of Singapore Newspaper Nameplates

Here’s a list of the nameplates of Singapore’s english newspapers and what typefaces they use. I’ve also included popular contemporary references that also use the same typeface, maybe the choice of usage says something about the paper?

stnameplate

Typeface: Big Caslon (Straits Times)
You might have seen it: Foreign Affairs (headline) and The New Yorker (body text)
tnpnameplate

Typeface: Helvetica Neue (The New Paper)
You might have seen it: Everywhere (even a film made about it)

btnameplate

Typeface: Frutiger
You might have seen it: National University of Singapore

btweekendnameplate

Typeface: Freight Sans (The Business Times)
You might have seen it: Reader’s Digest (logo)

mypapernameplate

Typeface: Myriad (my paper)
Also used by: Apple Inc

sundaytimesnameplate

Typeface: TheSans
You might have seen it: Sprint

todaynameplate

Typeface: Times New Roman
You might have seen it: Default font for Microsoft Word prior to Microsoft Office 2007