Large-print

Large-print

Large-print (also large-type or large-font) describes a type of book or other (paper, online or otherwise) published material in which the typeface (or font), and sometimes the medium, are considerably larger than usual, to accommodate people who have poor vision. Often public special-needs libraries will stock large-print versions of books, along with versions written in Braille.

Among librarians Large Print is defined as print that is at least 16 points in size.

Large Print book publishing in English began in 1964 in Leicester, England when Frederick Thorpe, a retired book and magazine distributor, decided to meet the needs of elderly poor-sighted readers by reprinting older classic books in editions about twice the physical size of the original book. [The Elverscroft Foundation, " [http://www.foundation.ulverscroft.com/foundation1.html How the Ulverscroft Foundation began] ", accessed 26 July 2007] The type inside was enlarged to about twice the size of the original printing. The books were given plain dustjackets with type only, color-coded to indicate categories like mysteries (black), general fiction (red), romances (blue), westerns (orange) and so forth. These editions met the need but were difficult for frail elderly readers to handle because of they were oversize.

In 1969 Thorpe's company, Ulverscroft, began to retypeset the books in 16 point type and print them in normal-sized bindings, again with color-coded plain jackets. This change greatly increased the acceptance of Large Print in public libraries. Thorpe himself became a Large Print ambassador, travelling around the English-speaking world promoting the acquisition of Large Print books for seniors.

Today Large Print editions of some current books are published simultaneously with regular print editions ["What Snow Disrupts" by Daniel C. Boyer is an exception, as it was conceived and written, and then published exclusively as a large-print book.] by their publishers and usually feature the same full-color jackets and jacket designs. Many, if not most public libraries in the English-speaking world have Large Print sections and most bookstores do carry some Large Print editions.

Recent Developments

Since 2005 some companies, notably ReadHowYouWant, have begun offering a variety of font sizes for Large Print books. This allows readers to choose the font that best suits them when purchasing a book. The font size usually varies from more regular sizes (11 and 13 point fonts) through to large (16 to 20 point fonts) and Super Large (up to 28 point fonts) [http://www.readhowyouwant.com/Format/PrintFormat.aspx] . These books can also be purchased in Bold.

Tutis Digital Publishing Pvt Ltd is one of the largest publishers of classics having published over 3500 classics and aims to publish 9000 further titles over the next 2 years. On 30th September 2008, Tutis Digital Publishing Pvt Ltd launched tutisclassics . Tutisclassics is an online catalogue of all titles published by Tutis Digital Publishing Pvt Ltd with links to over 35 online stores where they are currently being sold.

References

External links

* [http://www.tutisclassics.com/ Tutis Digital Publishing's Large Print Collection]
* [http://www.readhowyouwant.com/ ReadHowYouWant - Books in a variety of Large Print Sizes]
* [http://www.transactionpub.com/cgi-bin/transactionpublishers.storefront/en/Catalog/1100 Transaction Publishers Large Print Books]
* [http://www.gale.cengage.com/thorndike/ Thorndike Press Large Print Books]
* [http://www.randomhouse.com/largeprint/ Random House Large Print]
*Marco Valerio Editore
*Accessible publishing


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Look at other dictionaries:

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  • large print — large letters …   English contemporary dictionary

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  • print — print1 W3S2 [prınt] v ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ 1¦(words)¦ 2¦(books/newspapers)¦ 3¦(in a newspaper)¦ 4¦(photograph)¦ 5¦(cloth)¦ 6¦(write)¦ 7¦(make a mark)¦ Phrasal verbs  print something<=>off/out ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ …   Dictionary of contemporary English

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