Designing Worship Slides: Type

Last time we were looking at worship slides, I talked about colour, which was a fairly simple place to start. Now, we move into something more substantial. We’ll be looking at type. In order to understand the importance of type, you need to understand typography.

Typography is the art and techniques of type design, modifying type glyphs, and arranging type. Type glyphs (characters) are created and modified using a variety of illustration techniques. The arrangement of type is the selection of typefaces, point size, line length, leading (line spacing) and letter spacing.

When I explain type, most people immediately think of fonts. The selection of a proper font to set your worship slides in is one of the most important decisions you have to make. Different fonts have different character and communicate different things. Good type selection will help add to the atmosphere that the worship leader is trying to create. Poor type selection will distract the congregation.

While type involves far more than font selection, it’ll be the focus of this post. Depending on your computer situation, you may have access to a variety of fonts, but likely only a few are suitable for use in worship slides. We will be looking mainly at the Microsoft core fonts for the web in detail, but we’ll also take a quick look at the new Cleartype fonts and other nice fonts in future posts.

The web core fonts were released by Microsoft in 1996 and are guaranteed to be on pretty much any computer. These fonts are Andale Mono, Arial, Comic Sans, Courier New, Georgia, Impact, Times New Roman, Trebuchet, Verdana, and Webdings. That is quite a few fonts and chances are that Office will have unloaded about ten times as many fonts for you to choose from. We need a way to eliminate some of these right off the bat.

Remember our goals. Our choice of typeface needs to be easy to read. Immediately, Webdings is out, or at least I’d hope so. But, there are other criteria that we need to look at in order to narrow our options. We’re going to be reading song lyrics, so we’re not going to be using monospaced fonts like Andale Mono or Courier New. While they may be excellent for coding, they are horrid for regular reading, are too mechanical, and take up too much screen space. Following the same train of thought, Impact is disqualified because it is also not meant for body text.

But all of those choices above were fairly clear and obvious. We’re now left with the fonts that most people think are fine for use in worship, sometimes to my disappointment. Much of the time, this is because we forget that fonts have character, and that the font should match the context of whatever the words and music are trying to communicate. It is because of this that I cringe every time I see someone decide to set worship slides in Comic Sans.

But, we’ll begin with high school favourite Times New Roman. This actually isn’t that common of a font to use among people who’ve done slides for a while for the reason that it’s the font most associated with word processing and assignments. It is a decent font for print. On the screen, it isn’t horrid, but it’s not ideal. However, the main reason why Times New Roman is distracting is because of it’s association with work. This is especially true for student fellowships. We definitely don’t want to be reminded of that assignment we have due on Monday and we definitely don’t want to be causing these things to surface while we worship.

Comic Sans should not be a part of this group of fonts, but too many people use it. Understanding why Comic Sans, and any other font, is not appropriate requires us to understand the background of the font. Comic Sans was designed for use in children’s software and was modeled after comic book type. Practically, the fact that it was not designed as a general typeface means that it is a poor choice for setting body type. But more importantly, the informal character of the font conflicts with the context of our worship.

Trebuchet is a font that has been used liberally on the Internet, most notably as the choice of many blogging templates. While it’s not that great for body text on the web, it is adequate for use in larger sizes. It is a friendlier sans serif and much warmer than Arial is without being silly like Comic Sans. It isn’t ridiculously large like Verdana is either. Trebuchet is typically my font choice when there isn’t much on whatever machine I’m using.

Georgia is God’s gift to typography on the web. It is a serif font designed for being read on the screen. It is a very good font and an excellent replacement for Times New Roman for any document that’s meant to be read on screen. When it’s printed, it looks a bit large, but it does fine if you’re wanting to mix it up a bit. But if you need a serif font for those serious worship sets, you cannot go wrong with Georgia.

Verdana also sees a lot of usage on the web. This is because it’s ridiculously large size makes it really easy to read at small sizes. It’s not a bad sans serif, but it doesn’t fit our needs because we’ll displaying text at large sizes. Unfortunately, Verdana at large sizes is unpleasantly large and blocky.

Arial seems to be an inexplicably popular choice and I don’t understand why. The big thing about Arial seems to be it’s legibility and neutrality. What else would you want in a font? I don’t know, how about some emotion? Again, remember that we’re designing worship slides and we want the character of the fonts that we choose to be consistent with the content of the words. Choosing Arial works against our goal because it tries to be neutral when worship is supposed to make us anything but neutral. This is not to mention that Arial is a poorly designed font. At large sizes, it looks ridiculously empty and barren, which, again, is not consistent with our worship.

Simply going through the basic fonts just now has shown us a few things. You don’t need to amass a collection of premium type to create decent worship slides. However, it does require a lot of thought to choose the right type. But more importantly, this means that there is absolutely no reason to settle for slides with sub-par type. Even though we’ve only gone through a handful of fonts, you should be able to apply the same reasoning to choose appropriate fonts.

Also realize that the fact that most people don’t notice these things does not give us a license to typeset slides without thought. Again, approach the slides with the same attitude as you would a musician on worship team. Just because people can’t hear that you’re playing sloppily doesn’t give you a reason to. Many of these things about type usually go unnoticed consciously, but people can usually tell if something is off. It’s our job to make sure nothing’s off.

Designing Worship Slides: Introduction

For pretty much the entire time I was serving at Jaffray, one of the things I did was worship slides. It was the first thing I did in terms of serving and I did it all the way until I went off to university. Over that period of time, I was picking up on some design knowledge and that eventually made its way into how I designed slides.

For quite some time now, I’ve been observing how different churches and events do their worship slides. For the most part, slides are not very well designed. There are reasons for this. And this is why I decided to finally get cracking and write up a guide to designing slides.

Why are they bad?

For the most part, slides are designed by one of two groups of people: members of the A/V crew or the worship leaders themselves. There are reasons as to why both these groups tend to produce poor worship slides.

For worship leaders, it may be because slides aren’t really a priority. For the majority of them, it’ll be because playing around with PowerPoint isn’t their thing. Similarly, for A/V guys, design probably isn’t their thing, they’re more concerned about the equipment and the sound. While they may be more computer-y, they’re not necessarily artsy enough.

Why do they need to be better?

I anticipate that a lot of people are satisfied with their worship slides and will be wondering why I’m not content with the state of worship slides in general. The first reason is simple, that God doesn’t deserve any less than our very best. I’d be skeptical if you were sure that your slides were the best if you had no formal training in graphic design. Reading tons of Photoshop tutorials is no substitute for that. But as much as that reason is true, I really dislike pulling those types of answers. There are definitely more concrete reasons.

It’s true that as the A/V guy, your role is to be invisible. But the work that you do has just as much presence as the worship team up on stage. Just like the worship team, the job of A/V is to help create an environment where the congregation can worship without any distractions. When the congregation can’t read lyrics, that is distracting. When the congregation starts snickering at an ugly background, that is distracting. When the congregation is confused by lyrics that are split up illogically, that is distracting. Poorly designed worship slides will work against that goal.

What do you bloody know?

One of the interests I’ve developed during high school is design. Much of how I served at my church was through design, whether through web, print, or onscreen. So, no, I don’t have a degree or anything, but I have picked up a few books, so I’d imagine I’m a few steps ahead most. As for this area specifically, I’ve done it fairly constantly while I was serving at my church (about four years, to be exact), and I managed to get the opportunity to go wild and come up with the slides for TC 2006.

What’s on the menu?

I intend to make a series of posts, each addressing a different area of design for worship slides. These are things I think about when I whip them up, regardless of whether I’m at home with a week to go or in the sanctuary half an hour before service. These are:

  1. Background and colour
  2. Typography
  3. Positioning

And whatever you do…

And whatever you do, in word or deed, do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.

I’m glad I went to Campus Challenge. I wasn’t going to go because it was $165 and I’d already been spending a lot of money on things this year because it was Grade 12. Eventually, I was persuaded enough by my friends to go, to see what’s going on in university. Continue reading

Flying Into Daybreak

I don’t know how it happened, but one day, I started listening to Charlie Hall. It’s not like I hadn’t heard of him before or heard any of his songs. A few well known are written by him, like “Give Us Clean Hands”. But he was never a worship leader with CDs that I would go and try and find like I would for, say, Chris Tomlin. Continue reading

Passion Toronto Videos

You can find the videos that were played at Passion Toronto on the 268blog. There’s the intro and the interviews.

I really love the intro video thoughAnd in Gill Sans. Yes, it’s sad that I noticed that. Also, it’s set to David Crowder’s We Win..

HELLO TORONTO
HELLO CANADA

We have come from down below
To your BEAUTIFUL city
To lift up the BEAUTIFUL one.

He is ALIVE and well
Full of LIFE
And LOVE
And He is winning the day.

We are here for Him
Many people
Different people

(burst of names of Ontario colleges and universities)

But we all belong to HIM.

He is our LIFE
And BREATH
So we live our lives
For His FAME.

TONIGHT
Many voices
ONE anthem
ONE glory
ONE name

So let the whole city know
His name is
JESUS.