Ask HN: What is the most beautifully typeset book you've ever encountered?

9 points by luizfelberti ↗ HN
Recently I've been reading a lot of Tufte's work [0], and also some of Richard E. Mayer's stuff [1], as well as browsing through some older physical books, and started to get a feeling that the old stuff is of far superior quality, and that our tools for web publishing don't come even close.

I'm now looking to source some inspiration from the wisdom of the HN crowd, so: what are some examples of superb typography and typesetting you've seen in print?

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[0] https://www.edwardtufte.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg?msg_id=0000ld

[1] https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/cambridge-handbook-of-multimedia-learning/09E09224829AB8D3D327EF8A0E9B5288

8 comments

[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 30.5 ms ] thread
Saw somebody commenting on the quality of https://press.stripe.com/ books https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26532543 I don't own one myself.
Watching a tech company break free of legacy media and seize control of its narrative and position in the culture is awe-inspiring. Stripe is all the more impressive because their business wasn’t media-adjacent like Netflix’s.

I’m seeing a company that nails things so consistently and effortlessly that I am convinced that in a decade it’ll be Amazon but for finance. Potential competitors will be terrified of Stripe the same way they are of Amazon. They just execute too well to be comfortable around.

Not the "most beautifully typeset", but Augustin Louis Cauchy's "Cours d'Analyse de l'École Royale Polytechnique" in 1821 looks to have been done with TeX.

https://archive.org/details/coursdanalysede00caucgoog/page/n...

At the end of the introduction, he thanked a few people for their guidance. That's the who's who of mathematics and physics: Poisson, Ampère, and Coriolis.

House of Leaves goes through a few interesting concepts that seem to divide people (mirrored type, point size changes dependent upon how loud a sound is etc).
You should look into artist books too! One of my favorites is the Diderot Project, which I got to see when I took a class on letterpress printing and the history of book arts. It's based on the Diderot encyclopedia from the 1700s.

http://www.kenbotnick.com/diderot