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27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good for browsing fonts, less so for identifying fonts.
This is a book of font samples. You won't find any information on making your own fonts or installing and using them on a computer. This book won't outline font history or anatomy. It won't tell you how to design with fonts. It's simply page after page of sentences or sentence snippets, each rendered in a different typeface. Each font's name and manufacturer is listed...
Published on April 1, 2003

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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not for IDing Type Faces!
This book is done in a unique fashion and I wasn't disappointed with it. If you are simply looking for type faces, it fills the bill rather nicely. If you are trying to identify a type face, it doesn't offer enough for a comparison. Unfortunately, there are few capital letters shown so one cannot tell how the type face appears when composed in all capital letters. In a...
Published on September 26, 2004 by Bill


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27 of 28 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good for browsing fonts, less so for identifying fonts., April 1, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: The Big Book of 5000 Fonts (Turtleback)
This is a book of font samples. You won't find any information on making your own fonts or installing and using them on a computer. This book won't outline font history or anatomy. It won't tell you how to design with fonts. It's simply page after page of sentences or sentence snippets, each rendered in a different typeface. Each font's name and manufacturer is listed below each sample.

The book is great if you're a would-be font designer and are looking for inspiration. It's great if you're looking for a font to add pizzazz or personality to a graphic or flyer. It's also great for the casual typeface fan who simply enjoys looking at typefaces.

I agree with the author's statement in the book's introduction that he wanted a font book that "didn't have one mind-numbing sentence repeated time after time" throughout the book. While pangrams such as "The quick brown fox..." are standard and useful in that they (by definition) show every letter in the alphabet, it can become tedious to see the same words again and again. Having the fonts set in different sentences also adds interest to the look of the pages, and benefits those who wish to see how a font looks in a different combination of letters.

There are a few of problems with the book:
1. Fonts are listed by general category and then alphabetically by name. This makes it difficult and time-consuming to search for just one font if you don't know its name and have only a limited idea of what it looks like.

2. There just isn't enough sample text to truly get a good taste the font. The sentences and snippets probably average 8 words long and consist of a dozen different letters, which, in my opinion, is not enough to truly get a sense of the typeface.

Identifying fonts using this book will inevitably prove difficult. Each passage is unique and does not use every letter in the alphabet. So if you are relying in the distinct gap between the strokes of the letter G in a font to help you ID it, you may be out of luck if the sample text doesn't have words with G.

Ideally, font samples should display every letter twice (in capitals and lowercase forms), numbers, and punctuation characters. Granted, it's not realistic to expect that a book covering 5,000 fonts would be able to accomodate such thorough samples.

Of course, these are only problems if you're relying on the book to ID fonts for you. And in this book's defense, these weak points are common to a lot of font books.

On the whole, I found this book a welcome change from other font books that seem to think themselves pieces of art and are bent on showing me how modern and cool typography can be. If you just want a really big font book that will show you nothing but ton of samples, this is the book for you.

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19 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Not for IDing Type Faces!, September 26, 2004
By 
Bill "billsrrempire" (Southern Maryland, U.S.A.) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
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This review is from: The Big Book of 5000 Fonts (Turtleback)
This book is done in a unique fashion and I wasn't disappointed with it. If you are simply looking for type faces, it fills the bill rather nicely. If you are trying to identify a type face, it doesn't offer enough for a comparison. Unfortunately, there are few capital letters shown so one cannot tell how the type face appears when composed in all capital letters. In a few instances, the name of the font isn't the font that is shown! Yikes! In any event, it is a helpful addition to your library since many of the type faces shown in this book can be found at no other single source.
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Quick Brown Fox is Done Jumping, May 11, 2003
This review is from: The Big Book of 5000 Fonts (Turtleback)
Carter's laid out the fonts by category:
Comic book, retro, calligraphic, block letter, roughish, display, pseudo cultural, grunge, script, technological, illustrated and kids stuff, type-label-stencil, ornamental, others sans, other serif. The organization is clean.

Instead of using the boring text sample that litters the letters sampled in font catalogs, "The quick brown fox jumped over the lazy dog," Carter gifts us with vignettes. The font Scotty Normal is shown with the sample, "Would I have been a PGA Champion?" This could be read as a stream-of-conscious novel if it weren't a font book. With each sample, he lists the name and which type house sells it. The sources for the fonts are listed at the end, including several listings for free fonts.

It is indispensable for a new designer, or a student of typography. For me, as someone who uses typography as a secondary part of my job, I found it a strong tool for familiarizing myself with font families. I'd say a seasoned might not find it as useful, as much of this kind of information can be found elsewhere.

Anthony Trendl
editor, HungarianBookstore.com
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13 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Hard to find fonts., January 14, 2003
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This book is creatively written, but has been really no use to me in finding specific fonts. I wish the book were laid out with the same sentence "The Quick Fox Jumped Over the Lazy Brown Dog" instead of a bunch of free-flowing sentences. I'm not able to find fonts in this book because I can't pinpoint a single letter.
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5.0 out of 5 stars The Big Book of Five thousand Fonts, September 24, 2011
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This review is from: The Big Book of 5000 Fonts (Turtleback)
Love it. Fabulous collection, lots of wit. Quotations from fascinating people from all over the world and all over time. Just plain fun. Five stars! Mary Floyd in Tampa
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1.0 out of 5 stars Meh., February 6, 2009
This review is from: The Big Book of 5000 Fonts (Turtleback)
It's an ok book as a reference. The book is actually a huge story about nothing and every sentance is a different font face. The fonts are organized by style which is nice but when you find the font you want and there isn't an example of the letter you need, it's a little disappointing. I would have benefited more from the book showing A-Z and a-z in each font vs. the big story.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Funny book to read for fun, not good reference book, August 2, 2007
By 
Lisa Jackson "LJDesign" (Washington Terrace, Utah, USA) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: The Big Book of 5000 Fonts (Turtleback)
Funny, but not useful. I found the fonts and then looked where he said to. The companies and font names were not there.
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The Big Book of 5000 Fonts
The Big Book of 5000 Fonts by David E. Carter (Turtleback - Feb. 2002)
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