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Participant
July 23, 2019
Answered

Optical Margin Alignment

  • July 23, 2019
  • 2 replies
  • 2578 views

Hi, I'm wondering if there is a way to optically align left-flush characters without having to use the space before and negative kern trick.

In the below image you'll notice I've already enabled optical margin alignment but the E still sits very far from the edge of the frame.

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Correct answer a.yalda

Normally from my experience this also has to do with the font itself. You can try changing the title to use Optical Kerning as opposed to Metrics Kerning (if not already done) and see if that helps.

Otherwise because the Optical Margin Alignment point size is only set to 12pts (because that is most likely your body font) InDesign may simply not work the way you want it to for the large Title font, and you will need to manually kern it.

Large titles anyway are often manually kerned as it is more important typographically to have just the right spacing between letters for a title.

2 replies

a.yaldaCorrect answer
Inspiring
July 23, 2019

Normally from my experience this also has to do with the font itself. You can try changing the title to use Optical Kerning as opposed to Metrics Kerning (if not already done) and see if that helps.

Otherwise because the Optical Margin Alignment point size is only set to 12pts (because that is most likely your body font) InDesign may simply not work the way you want it to for the large Title font, and you will need to manually kern it.

Large titles anyway are often manually kerned as it is more important typographically to have just the right spacing between letters for a title.

rob day
Community Expert
Community Expert
July 23, 2019

I'm wondering if there is a way to optically align left-flush characters without having to use the space before and negative kern trick.

I don't think so. Every font character includes a side-bearing, which is proportional to the font size and is more obvious with a sans serif. So you would have to reverse track a space in front to move the first character relative to the frame boundary.