Ladislav Sutnar
Marquardt & Company Fine Papers, New York, 1943, English
Nonfiction, Graphic Design
4.75 x 7.75 inches, paperback booklet, 16 pages

The "Design and Paper" series was intended to promote the various lines of Marquandt Company papers. The design and printing of each issue meet the highest production standards of the day.
Sutnar’s aim was to educate both designers and clients about the effects of design and typography on the perception of information. Minimum means, maximum effect was Sutnar's Czechoslovak principle. In the U.S. he was the first to use the horizontal area of a spread for organizing information with the idea of dynamic reading and continuous visual flow. He designed the double-page in such a manner that it would be immediately scanned then would quickly provide the details required. Diagrams, widely used even prior to World War II as a means of visualization and rationalization,were effectively used by Sutnar in designing his catalogues. The continuous flow of hierarchically structured information was effected through the laws of optics and psychology of perception.

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