Posts Tagged ‘fonts’

Do YOU know where your fonts came from?

January 5th, 2010, posted in general thoughts, soapbox

[Are you ready for this hyperlink-tastic rant I wrote during a five-hour layover in Cincinnati?  Here goes:] I love free things just as much as the rest of you.  I’m an advocate for free culture, open source software, and fighting overly restrictive copyright laws.  However, when it comes to free fonts, there are some important distinctions to be made.  This is certainly not a new debate in the typography world, just adding my thoughts to share with my community and network.

Professional fonts can cost hundreds of dollars, sometimes thousands.  That may sound like a lot for just a font, but high end magazines, newspapers, and graphic design firms can afford it.  Designing a font is quite a fine art and science, and fonts take months, sometimes years to design; typographers should be compensated for their work.  Did you know it’s possible to make a living designing fonts?  I know a recent Hampshire alum who does just that – what a cool job!

However, we students, amateurs, and hobbyists can’t afford such things, so what do we do if we feel dubious about where our fonts are coming from?

You’ll notice on sites like Dafont (my favorite free font database), many fonts say “free for personal use.”  This generally means any non-commercial project, but the lines are fuzzy.  It’s worth mentioning that some “free” fonts are likely ripoffs, since the software is more accessible these days and it’s easy to change a few strokes on a font and then call it your own.  It is unlikely font foundries are going to hunt you down if you pirate or ripoff their fonts – unless you are a large corporation like NBC, or your project is seen in a wider public sphere.  Font lawsuits have happened a number of times, and the font foundries always win.

Recently I have come across more and more public domain and open source fonts, which is where things get exciting.  One particular group that appears to be at the forefront of this is the League of Movable Type.  An excerpt from their manifesto:

This revolution is not a movement against type foundries and type designers; it’s quite the opposite. The kind of revolution we want is a change in the way people think about doing business. We want type foundries and typographers to start thinking, “Maybe there’s nothing wrong with giving things away sometimes.”  It’s not always about the money, sometimes it’s also about making a contribution to the society, in this case, the design community. Giving one typeface away for free will most likely only boost sales, and it’s a good deed. We want more people to look at it like that: like they have a responsibility to do something good for their peers. We’re not asking type designers and type foundries to sacrifice profit, we’re asking them to contribute to a greater cause, to create a community where we not only have a high design standard for print and web alike, but also a community where we’re able to share our creations, knowledge, and expertise with our peers and the world.

There are many collections now, thanks to Smashing Magazine and others, of high quality professional fonts that have been released under a Creative Commons or some other kind of open source license.  You can even search on Dafont for just fonts that are public domain.  HOWEVER, even these seemingly well-intentioned open source folks are HOTLY DEBATED! in the typography world.

Now that there are so many fonts available (of all license varieties), maybe the real question should be, Do we need more fonts? – This final linked article is very geeky (and of course the conclusion is that we DO need more fonts), but a worthwhile read, I promise! An excerpt:

The most common question I get about being a type designer is this: “Aren’t there enough typefaces already?” The best response I have ever heard to this question is, “You know, I heard the same thing about people!” It is quite funny but probably comes across a bit rude, especially to people you have just met. For a long time, the best response I could come up with was a more diplomatic, although less articulate, “Oh, well you know, ha ha.” And then I would try to change the subject. “Aren’t there enough typefaces already?” isn’t a bad question though. There are a lot of typefaces. Even to a type designer, it can seem like everything has already been done…

Font of the Week Thursdays: Chaparral

October 15th, 2009, posted in Font of the Week

Every thursday, I will enlighten you, dear readers, about a particular font that has been on my mind.  This week’s font is Chaparral Pro, which has been my favorite font for the last year or two, superseding Garamond.

chaparral_example

chaparral - brown foxIt was designed by Carol Twombly, who is my FAVORITE font designer, and also one of the few female typographers – I named my bicycle after her.  She also designed Caslon, Myriad, Charlemagne, Lithos, Nueva, Zebrawood, and Trajan – the names may be unfamiliar, but I’m confident that you would surely recognize all of them.

Chaparral is a very beautiful slab serif.   In layperson’s terms, that means it’s serifs (the little bits sticking off the end of each letter stroke) are thicker and more block-like, and meet the stroke at a sharp angle.

chaparral - lazy dogChaparral combines the versatile legibility of slab serif designs popularized in the 19th century with the grace of 16th-century roman book lettering.  It’s varying letter proportions and x-height (the height of the lower case letters) give it a clean, friendly, accessible feel.

It comes bundled with any Adobe Creative Suite software, so if you have Photoshop, InDesign, Illustrator, or After Effects, you should have it already!  Use Chaparral for essays about environmental justice, posters for the radical knitting club, wine labels, business cards, nonprofit circus groups, tea party invitations, book covers, birthday cards for your mom, magazine headlines, or pretty much anything that calls for a crisp, cordial, clever font.

Don’t you feel so much better about life now that you know about Chaparral?

Ambiwho? Ambiwhat? AMBIGRAM!

June 10th, 2009, posted in art, inspiration, projects

One of Tara and I’s obsessions while traveling was creating ambigrams. They first came onto our radar when we were discussing the design possibilities for our next circus venture, Downside-Up. With a name like that, there are so many graphic possibilities, but I realized an ambigram would be the most apropos.

What is an ambigram?  According to Wired, ambigrams are the hottest trend in typography since Helvetica.  An ambigram is a word-image that can be read from multiple vantage points, most commonly by flipping it 180 degrees.  Ambigrams were popularized a few years ago by Dan Brown’s book Angels and Demons, which features several ambigrams as plot points, including this one to the left.

Now, the complex gothic ambigrams from Angels and Demons were the only ones I was very familiar with, and I believed them to be for advanced artists, mathematicians, designers – not for amateur typographers and doodlers like us.

ambigram in progress

ambigram in progress

NOT SO!  Ambigrams are fun AND easy to make!  Tara and I made loads of them on our many long train rides around Europe.  It’s pretty simple – I just start with writing the word below itself upside down.  Then look at each of the letter pairs, think about the key components in each letter necessary to define it, and start doodling different ways those letters can be combined.  Think about how to turn necessary letter strokes into decorative elements.  It also helps to consider both upper and lower case letters, I thought ‘SEATTLE’ would be impossible, until I thought to try it with lower case letters.seattle_ambigramI’m in the process of digitizing the Downside-Up ambigram for a logo now, but meanwhile here’s another one I’m working on.  Try making them sometime!  And don’t go looking for any lame ambigram generators on the internet – get out a pencil and pad and do it yourself.   It’s like solving a logic puzzle.

circus_ambigram

For more on ambigrams, check out:

http://www.johnlangdon.net/ – the website of the Prof who’s one of the leading ambigram scholars, he also made all the ambigrams for Dan Brown.

http://www.ambigram.com/ – online magazine about everything ambigram.

How big of a typography geek am I?

July 25th, 2008, posted in art, general thoughts

The other day I was fontspotting in Northampton, and I wondered just how many fonts I could easily name if I saw them somewhere in public. At first I thought about a dozen. Then I thought, well, maybe something more like two dozen.

When I got home I made a list of all the fonts I can recognize and identify instantaneously.

48. And there are about two dozen more I can name with a little thought.