Sunday, November 1, 2009
here's a link to download my pdf for the last assignment.
Thanks
MarkSoetantyo_experimentaltype.pdf
Thursday, October 29, 2009
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
CATEI Reminder
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
FINAL SUBMISSION GUIDELINES
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Miranda's experiments
Sunday, October 11, 2009
Mark's font experiment & development
Contemporary graphic designers such as France based ill-Studio, Maya Hayuk, Walter Allner; a Bauhaus-trained graphic designer, and hand drawn triangle illustration by Ondrej Jób; a Bratislava type designer inspired me for this font development.
I started by sketching on piece of graph paper and move to illustrator to develop it more. I also experiment using pins and cotton (as seen bellow). I think this could be a quite nice set of geometric font. After seeing some of letters, I see that origami could be as a reference as well for further development.
Here are some fonts that still in development.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
try out
Saturday, October 3, 2009
Friday, October 2, 2009
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Jenny's Exercise 1&2
I often use Comic Sans font for various purpose. I like the informality of it
and it is fairly stylized- hand rendered. It is similar to my own hand writing,
thus I feel comfortable reading and writing with it. This font is a little more
modern than serif font, and I think it is great to use for tables and charts
compared to the serif fonts. I also think that this font allow eye to follow the
text easier than fonts such as Times New Roman.
Where do I use it?
I use this font for making tables, charts, informal documents, comics and posters.
About this font
Comic Sans is a casual script typeface designed by Vincent Connare and released
in 1994 by the Microsoft Corporation. It is classified as a casual, non-connecting script,
and was designed to imitate comic book lettering, for use in informal documents. The
typeface has been supplied with Microsoft Windows since the introduction of Windows 95, initially as a supplemental font in the Windows Plus Pack. The font's widespread use,
often in situations for which it was not intended, has been criticized.
Comic Sans is frequently used in both comic books and webcomics as a substitute for hand-lettering, although comic artists usually prefer to use custom-designed computer
fonts instead. The Comic Sans font has been used on several products, including the
tags on Beanie Babies (since the late 1990s) and the 2004 Canada Day 25-cent collector coin.[6] It is also used in The Sims video game series.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comic_Sans
Research questions
Can I produce a font that is easy on eye?
Can I produce a font with humour?
Can I produce a font for teenagers?
Who will be the target for the usage of this font?
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Thursday Class Time and Place
Good to see that most of you have also now posted some experiments. I will try to comment on them this evening - but for now it seems a lot of you have tried cutting / ripping / moulding techniques that are a good start but tend towards a certain aesthetic that neglects some of the richness and individuality that can be made in shaping a series of letters into a unique and highly recognisable font with the characteristics and background that you have highlighted in your favourite font exercise. So for tomorrow I want you to prepare a few things so that we can have an intensive font making studio - you will need to bring in:
A wide brush and some ink / water colour
Graph paper
Soft lead pencils - 2b / 4b
Collect some found objects, twigs and sticks
A rule / compass and tape
Also -
Print out a full set of letter forms from your reviewed font - including upper and lower case, and other special characters, at 40pts
Return to your research questions and print them out with a series of responses that respond or note down avenues for experimentation and ways of investigating these questions (you may choose to focus on your best 3) eg:
Q - Can I produce a font that can be collapsible?
Notes - Try making letters from wooden components that are screwed together, try folding letterforms out of paper and throwing them in the air and photographing them, collect images of buildings, bridges and other built forms collapsing, review them for letter shapes and possibilities.
Q - Can I produce a font which can be modified?
Notes - Try to come up with a series of letter forms that when used can be placed over each other to create a range of possible variations on each letter shape...
With all of these we can then spend the class focusing on creating a series of possible starting points for developing a truly experimental, recognisable and useable font - I would like to try and focus on the letter A, G, Q, S and I
To get you thinking here are some letter forms from Neasden Control Centre's Polemia series - a project that combines action and experimentation starting with different choices of working material. The letter forms are an act of collection and acquisition, reclaiming lost or forgotten objects - as well as of creative juxtaposition. The real character of these letter forms come from the obvious made quality - the carry a 3-dimensional weight that comes from the careful construction and combining of elements on the one hand in balance, but also as an installation - out of scale with our usual experience of 'type'
Nina's Exercise 1&2
The capital M from Gill Sans is based on the proportions of a square with the middle strokes meeting at the centre of that square. The Gill Sans typeface family contains fourteen styles and has less of a mechanical feel than geometric sans-serifs like Futura, because its proportions stemmed from Roman tradition. Unlike realist sans-serif typefaces including Akzidenz Grotesk and Univers the lower case is modelled on the lowercase Carolingian script. The Carolingian influence is noticeable in the two-story lowercase a, and g. The lowercase t is similar to old-style serifs in its proportion and oblique terminus of the vertical stroke. Following the humanist model the lowercase italic a becomes single story. The italic e is highly calligraphic, and the lowercase p has a vestigial calligraphic tail reminiscent of the italics of Caslon and Baskerville. Gill Sans serves as a model for several later humanist sans-serif typefaces including Syntax and FF Scala Sans. An Infant variety of the typeface with single-story versions of the letters a and g also exists.
The basic glyph shapes do not look consistently across font weights and widths, especially in Extra Bold and Ultra Bold weights, and Extra Condensed width. However, even in lighter weights, some letters do not look consistent. For example, in letters p and q, the top strokes of counters do not touch the top of the stems in Light, Bold, Heavy fonts, but touch the top of the stems in Book, Medium fonts.
Monday, September 21, 2009
Alexia's homework
EUROSTILE
Why do you like it?
I think that the primary reason why I like it is that there is a nice blocky-ness to it. There is a definite squareness to it, but it is softened ever so subtly by the curves. It’s an old font, but I believe that Eurostile isn’t used that much because people tend to opt more for the gentler fonts like Helvetica, Gills Sans and perhaps even Futura to a degree. Eurostile has a particular strength and sense of dimension to it.
What characters work best?
For me I think that the K, B, G, S, O, a, e, k, m, t and o work the best because they have that balance between the rigid box and the subtle curve.
Those that could work better
I think that M, W, X and Z could work better if they were slightly more condensed because they feel wider than the rest of the Cap fonts.
How often do you use it?
Admittedly, I don’t use the font that often because a majority of the projects I work on are community and cultural based so it’s a tad inappropriate.
Where and why you use
I think that it works more as a title/subheading font to illustrate the strength of modernity or something along those lines – instead of body text.
What might you be able to learn from this as an exemplary font design?
It is ‘distinctive without being flamboyant’.
Historical Information:
Originally the type was created as an uppercase font and was drawn by Alessandro Butti (1893 - 1959, type designer and teacher. Art director of the Nebiolo type foundry in Turin), with help from his assistant Aldo Novarese (who later became one of Italy’s premier typeface designers). It was first called Microgramma.
Released in 1952 it was popular for the next 10 years, but proved difficult because it didn’t have lower case letters. In 1962 it was released with the lowercase letters and renamed Eurostile.
Linotype began distributing Eurostile decades ago, and during the early 1980s, it worked together with Adobe to bring Novarese’s creation into the digital age as PostScript fonts.
The most obvious attribute of Eurostile, other than its lack of serifs, is the squared quality of its design. Many of the letters look as if they began life by tracing the frames of old television screens. There is a symmetry and implied mathematical quality to the design. Hermann Zapf dubbed this the “super curve,” and worked with it himself in his serif newspaper face Melior®. The geometricity of Eurostile also puts it together with types like Avenir®, Futura®, and ITC Avant Garde Gothic®, even though Eurostile looks quite different at first glance.
Eurostile has a large x-height and is distinctive without being flamboyant. In plain text, this means that it is not a replacement for sans serif text faces like Univers® or Franklin Gothic™. Nevertheless, Eurostile is easy to use well, and it has the added benefit of standing out from the crowd of other typefaces in the sans serif genre.
http://www.linotype.com/5324/eurostilenext.html
RESEARCH QUESTIONS
What is my motivation for this font?
Who will I want using it?
Can it be have a multifaceted use?
What is the experience of this font?
How does the font affect the message I want to create?
Can it involve the ‘reader’ in producing it?
Can it be a learning tool?
I think I might extend my research from the publication. Tactile typography and the experience as opposed to just the look of a font.
Highlighter on lined paper. I then used a scalpel to lift the letters from the page.
Ripped up strips of paper and the folded them to create letter forms.
Yoghurt letter forms. Yum!
felix exercise 1, 2, 3, 4
Optima®
About this font
Optima, one of Hermann Zapf’s most successful typefaces, was released by the D. Stempel AG in 1958.
In 1950, Zapf made his first sketches for his “serifless roman” while visiting the Santa Croce church in Florence. He sketched letters from grave plates that had been cut about 1530, and as he had no other paper with him at the time, the sketches were done on two 1000 lire bank notes. These letters from the floor of the church inspired Optima, a typeface that is classically roman in proportion and character, but without serifs. The letterforms were designed in the proportions of the Golden Ratio.
In 1952, after careful legibility testing, the first drawings were finished. The type was cut by Stempel’s renowned punchcutter, August Rosenberger. Optima was also produced in matrices for the Linotype Machine. With the clear, simple elegance of its sans serif forms and the warmly human touches of its tapering stems, this family has proved popular around the world.
Optima is the typeface used for the text on the Vietnam Veterans’ Memorial in Washington, D.C.
quoted from: http://typophile.com/node/15685?
Why i like this font
It combines the clarity of modern face with the objectivity of sans-serif typefaces.Thus, it is highly recognizable but has a low fatigue to its audiences. The outline of Optima is not exactly erect, but with a micronic curve which makes the font formal, steady, without a sense of stiffness. The scale of its thickness is perfect, let the font seems fairly elegant.
Where do I normally use it
I normally use it on the advertisements, especially for cosmetics.
Exercise 2: research questions
Can I produce a font that expresses a boorish sense?Can I produce a font that expresses a compare of stillness and movement?
Can I produce a font that is stupid?
Can I produce a font that is luxury?
Can I produce a font that is aboriginal?
Exercise 3: Handwritten Lettering
This will be post later.
Exercise 4: Develop a sample of five letters that are “written” with unusual mark-making instruments.
attempt 1: Rough
This is an attempt to answer my first research question: Can I produce a font that expresses a boorish sense?
I think about using the surface of ground tile as bottom textile and the surface of sole as upper textile to produce such sense.
following is the whole process
step 1: print and cut
step 2:making the edge become rough
step 3: finding the bottom textile
step 4: acquiring the textile on the paper
step 5:coloring the upper textile
step 6: producing
step 7: initial outcome
step 8: segistration
step 9: final outcome
attempt 2: light writing
This is an attempt to answer my second research question: can I produce a font that express a compare of stillness and movement?
I use a laser pen to "write" the alphabets on a big screen with recording by a digital camera to achieve it in a dark photographic studio.
The alphabets is the track left by laser-light's movement which captured by camera, but nothing was really reserved on the screen. after the camera stop its shoot, it seems that nothing has happened before.
Gopi Exercise - 1 & 2
Centable Book
It is very difficult to select pick any one font as my favourite since I have a likening for too many fonts. But if I have to make a choice then Centable Book stands out for me. Primarily it is a very clean and readable font which is why it tops my list. One can read anything written with it from a distance and it also gives a spacious feeling.
Though it comes from the serif font family, some of it’s characters have a contemporary touch. That makes it quite exclusive. Moreover this font can be use for different purpose and for various subjects. For example the same type can be use in body copy as well as a headline.
In particular I like alphabets a, g, e, q in lower case and also the dot on ‘i’ and ‘j’. The shapes are pretty different from the regular round or square ones which makes the fonts special to me. If you observe the letters closely the base of some letters are a bit slanting which proves that the letters were not totally designed for formal reasons. Therefore, the lowercase are more special to me than the uppercase. Given a chance, I would like to make some changes in the uppercase characters. Not many but surely some of them. Letter Q, O, M, R and S are the most impressive from the uppercase.
Whenever I have a simple and decent design to make, I consider this font as a priority. For most of my project I used this font. As a professional, I used this font at in various campaigns. Sometimes even in stationary design and also while creating logo designs when the name of company was started with letter G. Since ‘G’ has the most exquisite look amongst all the characters, upper or lower case.
Exercise - 2
Can I produce fonts which can be eatable?
Can I produce a font which melts like an ice cream.
Can I produce a font in which people can live?
Can I produce a font which can be modified?
Can I produce a font which people can use as cloths?
Can I produce a font which people can use for next 50 years?
Can I produce font which reminds you of nature.
Can I produce a font which can be attracting small kids?
Iris: exercises 1&2
Papyrus font is a popular and unusual roman typeface that effectively merges the elegance of a traditional roman letterform with the hand-crafted look of highly skilled calligraphy.
It’s handcrafted and irregular as well as rough look give Papyrus a distinct look that lends itself well for display type. It is especially suitable for anything that needs to look a little bit antique.
Although this typeface has been overused in the past decade so many people are currently bored with it. But it value can be used in everywhere, such as logo, information board, book covers and packaging. Some people even use it for PowerPoint presentations. I think the small letter like b, d, f, h, k etc look better, because they are look very slightness and unique. Interestingly, they are even longer than capital letter. In addition, capital letter like E that the first bar is shorter than the middle one looks very funny.
This unique style font created by American designer Chris Costello, a designer and illustrator, created Papyrus using a calligraphy pen and textured paper. His intent was to create a typeface that looked as if written on papyrus 2000 years ago. On his website, he says that he has“affection for classic lettering styles”. He has also designed the typefaces Blackstone, Letterpress text, Mirage and Virus. He is a professional bass player and a black belt in Tae-Kwon Do. In an interview, Costello talks about the inspiration and process for Papyrus: I took a calligraphy pen and some textured paper and just started drawing “old looking” alphabets in many different styles. I was thinking about the ancient Middle East and I then began writing words, dates and phrases from the history of that time in all upper case lettering. I soon came up with what I thought vernacular writing may have looked like if the English language existed 2000 years ago. It probably would have been written on papyrus and figured that would be the perfect name for the font.
Papyrus was re-issued by linotype and ITC. It is now included with Microsoft and Apple as a system font.
Research question:
1.Can I produce a font that can be familiar with others?
2. Can I produce a font that can be use in holographic projection?
3. Can I produce a font that can be collapsible?
4. Can I produce a font that would melt?
5. Can I produce a font that can attract living creature such as butterfly?
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Todays class - week 9
Mark's Excersice 4
For exercise 4, I've playing around with a bohemian scarf and a perfume packaging. I like how these two objects turns out, each has a different feels to it. For the scarf, it looks a little bit organic and playful, more texture and color. While for the packaging its a bit bold and industrial i might say.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
Miranda's exercises 2, 3 & 4
Ok I have to admit I really don’t understand the nature of this question so my answers may seem a little glib, but what is a toxic or washable font?
Can I produce a font that is edible?
Can I produce a font that causes people to have an epilectic fit?
Can I produce a font that brings tears to your eyes, in a good way that is?
Can I produce a font that people would want to wear?
Can I produce a font that makes your hair shiny?
Can I produce a font that will make me squillions of dollars?
Exercise 3
Handwritten lettering; well for this I handwrote my letters then cut them out with a scapel and then I made a stencil of them and spray painted them and also some other treatments. Not sure how successful they are but they definitely look like my handwriting which is messy. I wanted to try some ink versions of my fav font but no ink so that will have to wait.
Exercise 4
Here are a couple of experiments with making letters, one is some wooden drawing models and the other some wool.