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PO Box 6218, Marion Square,
Wellington
Tel +64 4 385 7315
Fax +64 4 385 7309
Email office@thestreet.org.nz
You are here > Home / Styleguide / Italics
Avoid italics like the plague
Italics are totally impossible to read on many screens. They show up as an irritatin blur. Even on paper, italics slow down reading by 40 percent.
In the old days, some typewriter keyboards did not offer a way to type italics, so underline marks were a signal from the writer to the typesetter that the text should be italicized. Underlining still indicates italics in typography. Avoid using the underline function except to indicate italics.
Italicize the titles of books, journals, periodicals, newspapers, pamphlets, proceedings, collections, theses, dissertations, plays, movies, operas, oratorios, paintings, drawings, sculptures, and other works of art.
NOTE: When the full title is not used, “the Herald” it is not italicized.
NOTE: When it comes to poetry, only epic poems are italicized. Regular short poems are set in quotation marks in the usual roman type.
Do not italicize titles of articles, chapters in books, short stories, regular poems, radio and television programs, lectures, papers read at meetings, manuscripts in collections. Instead, type them in roman type and set them inside quotation marks.
Do not italicise songs, ships, aircraft, or trains. Set in roman type and capitalize initials.