HOW's February issue include special features all about typography, including 18 Cures For the Common Font and New Fonts Your Clients Will Love (and You Will Too). Also, check out 97 award-winning designs from America's leading companies in the In-House Design Annual
• In-HOWse Design Annual
• Pick The Perfect Typeface
• Quark Makes a Comeback. Is InDesign Still Champ?
FEATURES
Past and Present Looking for a gorgeous new typeface with a historical feel? Look no further than Stern, from master typographer Jim Rimmer.
A Cure for the Common Font Tired of Times New Roman? Fed up with Futura? Here are 18 extraordinary fonts you should swap in.
For Display Only Your client wants a typeface that's distinctive, that's eye-catching—that sells! Choose from one of these new display faces and you'll look like a genius.
Best of Show: Packaging Well Done The top winner in HOW's second annual In-HOWse Design Awards, a packaging series for a high-end barbecue brand, scorched the competition.
In-HOWse Design Awards HOW recognizes the best work from designers in leading corporations and organizations. See the 97 winners this year.
COLUMNS
In-House Intersections The financial assistant you pass in the hallway can be a potential collaborator in your design work. Here's a case study on making creative connections in the office.
Wonder Emporium Take a peek inside perhaps the most creative workspace we've ever featured, where there isn't a front door, the conference room is Hell, and there are secret spaces waiting to be discovered.
Quark Vs. InDesign Our veteran technology columnist lines up QuarkXPress 8 and InDesign CS4 for a head-to-head comparison. Both programs have extensive new features—so which one is right for you?
ONLINE EXCLUSIVE
Travel Guides for Creatives Start planning your next vacation now, because we've launched a set of travel guides to various U.S. cities. Written with designers specifically in mind, these online goodies deliver the inside scoop on hot spots. Posted now: Omaha, NE, L.A. and Austin, TX.
Visit howdesign.com/article/travelguides