Graphic designers work with drawn, painted, photographed, or  computer-generated images (pictures), but they also design the  letterforms that make up various typefaces found in movie credits and TV  ads; in books, magazines, and menus; and even on computer screens.  Designers create, choose, and organize these elements—typography,  images, and the so-called “white space” around them—to communicate a  message. Graphic design is a part of your daily life. From humble things  like gum wrappers to huge things like billboards to the T-shirt you’re  wearing, graphic design informs, persuades, organizes, stimulates,  locates, identifies, attracts attention and provides pleasure.
Image-based design
Designers develop images to represent the ideas their clients want to  communicate. Images can be incredibly powerful and compelling tools of  communication, conveying not only information but also moods and  emotions. People respond to images instinctively based on their  personalities, associations, and previous experience. For example, you  know that a chili pepper is hot, and this knowledge in combination with  the image creates a visual pun. 
Type-based design 
In some cases, designers rely on words to convey a message, but they use  words differently from the ways writers do. To designers, what the  words look like is as important as their meaning. The visual forms,  whether typography (communication designed by means of the printed word)  or handmade lettering, perform many communication functions. They can  arrest your attention on a poster, identify the product name on a  package or a truck, and present running text as the typography in a book  does. Designers are experts at presenting information in a visual form  in print or on film, packaging, or signs.
  
Image and type
Designers often combine images and typography to communicate a client’s  message to an audience. They explore the creative possibilities  presented by words (typography) and images (photography, illustration,  and fine art). It is up to the designer not only to find or create  appropriate letterforms and images but also to establish the best  balance between them.
 
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