29/03/2008

13 typefaces every graphic designer needs

by David Airey
Published on October 25th, 2007

With thousands of different typefaces on offer, it’s vital to have a select few that act as pillars in your collection. The following 13 typefaces (shown in alphabetical order) are ones that I believe every graphic designer should be familiar with. [Ler mais...]

28/03/2008

Post Typography



"Wayne and Garth meets Chermayeff & Geismar."
Paul Carlos. Principal, Pure+Applied NYC

Originally conceived and founded in 2001 as an avant garde anti-design movement by Nolen Strals and Bruce Willen, Post Typography specializes in graphic design, conceptual typography, and custom lettering/illustration with additional forays into art, apparel, music, curatorial work, design theory, and vandalism. Their work has received numerous fancy design awards and has been featured in such publications as Ellen Lupton's Thinking With Type and D.I.Y.: Design It Yourself, The Art of Modern Rock, Metropolis magazine, Taschen's Contemporary Graphic Design, and Phaidon's Area 2. Post Typography have appeared in numerous design and art exhibitions, and their posters are collected by high school punk rockers and prominent designers (whom they consider equally important). Strals and Willen currently teach classes in design and typography at the Maryland Institute College of Art, and have lectured at the Cooper Union, Minneapolis College of Art & Design, and Harvard University among others. [Ler mais...]

Edward Fella



[Ler mais...] > Edward Fella_bio

26/03/2008

Insights Design Lecture Series: Ed Fella

Part of: blogs.walkerart.org / by Ryan Nelson at 10:32 pm 2008-03-19  / Filed under: 

Week four of the Insights Design Lecture Series features Ed Fella of Valencia, California. Concluding this year’s series, the lecture will take place on Tuesday, March 25, at 7 pm in the Walker cinema. Tickets are available here.

Ed Fella returned to school to complete his undergraduate and graduate degrees in graphic design, after three decades as a successful designer practicing in the Detroit area where he grew up. He received his MFA from the Cranbrook Academy of Art in 1987 and then headed west to teach at the California Institute of the Arts. His innovative hand-rendered and manipulated typographic compositions, masterful collages, and prolific sketchbooks prefigured the resurgence of the art form and inspired countless other designers to find their hand again in the age of computer-assisted design and desktop publishing. Fella's work has been shown worldwide and is the subject of several books, including Edward Fella: Letters on America (2000). In 1997 he received the Chrysler Award for Design Innovation and in 2007 the AIGA Medal, its highest honor.

As a precursor to Tuesday’s lecture we asked Ed to reveal a little about himself and his influences:

1. What have you been obsessing about?
It was getting 
my exhibition up at the RedCat gallery… something we have been working on for several months.

2. What's your most prized possession?
My 70-year-old body and my 50 year’s worth of work. Both need archiving…

3. What are you reading?
“Graphs, Maps, Trees” by Franco Moretti, an actual book and “Heyday” by Kurt Andersen, an unabridged audio book…I always read both kinds in tandem, one for sitting and one for walking, drawing, or driving…

4. What's one of your guilty pleasures?
Making “art”!

fella6.jpgfella7.jpg

5. What do you consider the most overrated virtue?
Making art is good for the soul, the psyche, and the society…

6. What is one of the most unexpected influences on your design?
The discovery (or consciousness) of the “vernacular” and that I was in it!

7. What were you doing before you responded to this questionnaire?
Getting that damn exhibition up…

8. What question do you wish we'd asked you?
“Do you like filling out these types of questionnaires?” and I won’t give you the answer…

fella10.jpgfella8.jpgfella9.jpg
— Scans from IDEA Magazine #318 (2006) which featured Fella’s work

 

23/03/2008

Graphic Convergence:

Drawing Together Ed Fella and Geoff McFetridge

Two lines align: you can’t deny the pleasure of the words taken together. Two lines. A line. Align. And it’s not just pretty: the lines and their alignment constitute curator Michael Worthington’s central conceit—that the work of designers Ed Fella and Geoff McFetridge, who are separated by more than 30 years in age, as well as by method, worldview, technology, institutional foundation and culture, does indeed come together in interesting and productive ways, ways that move beyond mere chronology or the influence of one generation on another. “When you put the two of you end-to-end it forms a line that makes sense,” Worthington said in an interview with the artists. And his show, “Two Lines Align: Drawings and Graphic Design by Ed Fella and Geoff McFetridge” on view at REDCATgallery in downtown Los Angeles through April 6, offers a huge collection of work spanning 40 years in support of his contention. But you wouldn’t think so at first.

Ed Fella at the exhibit opening and some of his featured work.

At the exhibit’s start, visitors find display cases featuring dozens of sketchbooks by the 70-year-oldFella, who graduated from the Cranbrook Academy of Art in 1987 after a successful career as a commercial artist, and is now on the faculty at CalArts where he’s been teaching for more than 20 years. In one book on one page, a collage: the body of a boy, the head of a girl, a building, a plane. Dated 1983, the slight but nimble piece suggests the nascent ’80s deconstructive impulse that would explode a few years later, and references Russian and German collage works 50 years prior. More striking than the piece’s combined clarity and complexity, though, is how the sketchbooks feel so precious, their colorful, delightful images sparking a warm nostalgia and a desire to touch, to feel the layers of paper, the grease of crayons, the smudge of pencil.

Geoff McFetridge’s work on display and the artist at the opening.

Moving back along a wall of classic Fella posters, featuring his iconic lettering style which initially appears casual but is scrupulously composed, visitors come upon a large box housing a ton of stuff: hats, skateboards, posters, magazines, CDs, T-shirts and many other things, all of it emblematic of a generation and all marked by simple line drawings, silhouettes and graphics. The style shares the hand-drawn vernacular lettering that echoes Fella’s work, but there’s also a rosy haze of ’70s kitsch, too, that feels cool but well framed—not critically but affectionately. This is work by Geoff McFetridge, who graduated from CalArts in 1995, founded the design studio Champion Graphics the following year, returned to CalArts as a faculty member and is now one of the most celebrated designers today (see him in the upcoming documentary Beautiful Losers). Unlike Fella’s sketchbooks, McFetridge’s box of things is not precious so much as sincere, any solicitous critique softened by felicitous appropriation and recontextualization. Like many of his contemporaries, McFetridge mines the cultural materials around him, and through a kind of mimicry at once celebrates material culture while remaking it to suit his own needs. Referencing the clarity of children’s books, McFetridge says he yearns for a similar simplicity and directness.

Untitled work by Fella, 2007.

Rather than blithely denoting that hoary divide said to distinguish a critical, art-inflected practice and the more obviously commercial work, Worthington instead posits a vector that unites the two eras and directions. It brings together the deconstructive urge of the ’80s evident in Fella’s dazzling posters—which refute an entire generation’s rules and methods—and the clarity and jaunty acceptance of commodification suggested by McFetridge’s work. Rather than mere capitulation, from a high ground of disaffected resistance, artful ambiguity and transgression to the lower ground of corporate compliance, the vector instead maps the contours of a sociocultural shift that no longer demands outright antipathy but instead invites coy participation—on new terms. “Times change and cultures change,” says Fella in the interview. “Attitudes change.”

Installation by McFetridge, 2008.

The lines blur, then, taking the shape of a Möbius strip where art and commerce, fine art practice and graphic design, align on a surface that itself shifts in response to needs. The analogy is not capricious, as the winding strip itself conjures formal elements evident in the work of both designers. McFetridge frequently uses lines to conjure impossible drawings: a hand that becomes a landscape, for example; a single, continuous edge that morphs from border to furrow to edge. And the lines of an earlier generation—lines you wouldn’t cross, lines between this and that—converge and take shape for a newer generation.

Works by Fella (top) and McFetridge in “Two Lines Align.”

Sean Cubitt writes eloquently about vectors in his 2005 book The Cinema Effect, which divides the history of cinema into phases, one of them characterized by the vector. Considering these historical phases, he writes: “It is no longer a matter of recognition, of deciphering what is already encoded. Rather it is a matter of reinterpreting, of adding a new spin to a trajectory that has not yet realized itself.” As critics and curators begin to assess and chronicle the latest decade of graphic design history, they’ll need new models to accommodate new needs. To its credit, Worthington’s curatorial agenda eschews easy side-by-side comparison—which would still have been fascinating given the rich bodies of work considered—as well as a simplistic historical presentation that would observe the formal boundaries that do indeed seem to divide the two generations represented by Fella and McFetrdge. He is not examining a history so much as creating a way to conjure history. Indeed, Worthington spins a trajectory that reinterprets not just two designers and two generations but the possibilities of design history—acknowledging not only dialectical evolution, but the need to be attentive to the specifics of cultural context and the creative force of interpretation itself. As Fella says of the progression that brings the end of postmodern critique up against a new generation’s striving for authenticity: “That’s a very 20th-century trajectory, I think, in art and design.” He adds, “I can also see that as part of a shift that we both epitomize: something ending and something beginning but still being a continuum.” And it’s this notion—of history as continuum, as a trajectory always in the process of becoming, like a line in motion—that Worthington’s show manages to capture.

All photos by Scott Groller. © CalArts 2008

About the Author: Holly Willis is the director of the University of Southern California’s Institute for Multimedia Literacy, and writes frequently on media art and design.

19/03/2008

An Introduction to OpenType

What’s OpenType? Is it right for me?

[Ler mais...]
> http://www.typography.com/ask/recentTopic.php?rtID=86


Last updated 25 January 2008

10/03/2008

Paula Scher_film

Biography
For over three decades Paula Scher has been at the forefront of graphic design. Iconic, smart and unabashedly populist, her images have entered into the American vernacular.

http://www.aiga.org/content.cfm/medalist-paulascher

[Ver filme...]

Moleskine Paula Scher notebook @ Detour exhibition



Added: June 21, 2007From: moleskinecity
Paula Scher notebook
Category: Travel & Places
Tags: Moleskine Paula Scher citynotebook notebook lettera27

YouTube

Typography _twentieth century _timeline

Introduction

In this topic, you will explore the development of typography throughout twentieth-century Europe and America.

It has been driven by commercial, political, and technological pressures, as well as aesthetic and creative experimentation.

[Ler mais...]

...

07/03/2008

Zuzana Licko

eye magazine (text in full)

As one of the first type designers to exploit the potential of the Apple Macintosh in its pre-designer days, Zuzana Licko transformed the pixel from low-resolution imitation to high-style original. Her early Emigre fonts not only revolutionised digital typography but also opened up the market for the smaller foundries whose quarter-page ads populate today’s design magazines. She has designed more than two dozen typeface families and oversees the Emigre foundry, which currently offers 300 or so typefaces by the likes of Barry Deck, Jonathan Barnbrook, Frank Heine and Rodrigo Cavazos.

Born in Czechoslovakia, Licko (pronounced Litchko) emigrated to the US with her family as a schoolgirl. She studied architecture, photography and computer programming before taking a degree in graphic communications at the University of California at Berkeley. When Rudy VanderLans, her partner, launched Emigre, she began to contribute fonts to the fledgling ‘magazine that ignores boundaries’. Rather than replicate (on a dot matrix printer) typographic forms already adapted from calligraphy, lead and photosetting, Licko used public domain software to create bitmap fonts. Emperor, Emigre and Oakland appeared in the magazine and were soon advertised for sale when VanderLans and Licko co-founded the Emigre foundry.

Emigre’s development reflected the evolution of digital technology while questioning conventional ideas of legibility and layout. Licko’s highly structured typefaces counterbalanced VanderLans’ organic compositions. The ‘Emigre aesthetic’ lay at the heart of a once-controversial battle on the American design scene, pitting them against Modernists such as Massimo Vignelli, who referred to the new typography as ‘garbage’. The debate did little to slow the popularisation of the Emigre fonts, which by the late 1980s had moved beyond alternative pop cult status into the mainstream (The New York Times, ABC and Nike). The graphic design establishment has since recognised Licko and VanderLans with a 1994 Chrysler Award, the 1997 AIGA gold medal and the 1998 Charles Nypels Award for Innovation in Typography.

Licko’s intellectual approach to type creation continued to find inspiration in the production qualities of technology. In 1986 she created Citizen, which approximated the smoother bitmap printing of the new laser printers. Base-9 and Base-12 originated as screen fonts for Emigre’s website in 1995, and then evolved with a companion printer font. As Emigre began publishing more design theory, Licko developed more ‘classical’ fonts; her designs Mrs Eaves and Filosofia were based respectively on Baskerville and Bodoni. And with issue 60 (see Reviews pp.76-87) Emigre’s latest music-oriented incarnation, Licko and VanderLans have found yet another format in which the publication can continue to be a testing ground and type specimen for Emigre typefaces.

Rhonda Rubinstein spoke to Zuzana Licko about this apparently ideal setup for a type designer and questioned the courteous but curiously reticent designer on a variety of other type matters, all (via email) in 9pt Monaco.

Rhonda Rubinstein: Do you have a maxim?
Zuzana Licko: I’ve never thought about having a maxim . . . it might be: ‘Question the obvious’.

RR: And what typeface would it be set in?

ZL: That would depend on the context, of course. But for general print reproduction I would pick the last one I’ve finished, as I’m still trying to get better acquainted with the most recent designs.

RR: ZL:What is your greatest accomplishment?

ZL: That I was able to design functional and desirable typefaces without mastering calligraphy, which I was taught was impossible.

RR: Your greatest regret?

ZL: Sometimes I wish my career was more involved with disciplines that generate tangible items, like designing textiles, clothing, or shoes. I find it difficult to find good-looking shoes that are comfortable. I often pick up a comfortable shoe and think, if they had just done this or that differently, I’d wear it.

RR: After becoming well known for designing radical fonts, you became interested in more traditional ones. Why?

ZL: My interest in reviving the classics (which began in 1995) was sparked by two factors: the sophistication of personal computer technology, and Emigre magazine’s shift towards theory and the subsequent need for text faces to set large bodies of text. Each design gives me the opportunity to study details of classic faces that I’d never fully appreciate or notice through casual observation or usage. For example, working on my Bodoni revival, Filosofia, allowed me to better understand this long-time classic. This kind of scrutiny, in turn, has given me ideas for faces that are not strict revivals, such as Tarzana and Solex.

RR: How do you judge good typeface design?

ZL: It depends on the intended usage, and what criteria you define as being important: longevity of usage, intensity of usage, influence on other designers, etc. It takes the perspective of time to determine which typefaces remain classics, which become icons, and which fade away. Moreover, these perceptions also change, and it is the constant changing of these perceptions that drives our desire for new typeface solutions. In addition, new technologies and environments present new problems for the designer to address. The most successful experimental typeface designs are often those that address the possibilities or limitations of a yet uncharted technology.
But we live and make decisions in the moment without the benefit of a time-lapse perspective. You must have opinions on typeface designs, and criteria for determining whether you want to pursue a particular design.
For me it’s like the Supreme Court’s definition of pornography: ‘I know it when I see it.’ I don’t have a preconceived idea about what constitutes a good typeface design. It can be a font created by LettError’s random technology, an old classic such as Bodoni, or a new classic such as Matthew Carter’s Verdana. It has to contain some originality, something that makes you think, ‘Hmm, I hadn’t thought about that,’ but originality in itself is not enough.

RR: Your father, a biomathematician who enabled your early computer access, was your first client, with the commission of a Greek alphabet for his personal use. What other people, events and/or things have influenced you most?

ZL: There were at least two important events: meeting Rudy VanderLans, and meeting the Macintosh computer. The Macintosh was unveiled at the time I graduated. It was a relatively crude tool back then, so established designers looked upon it as a cute novelty. But to me it seemed as wondrously uncharted as my fledgling design career. It was a fortunate coincidence; I’m sure that being free of preconceived notions regarding typeface design helped me in exploring this new medium to the fullest. It’s interesting how the gradual sophistication of my type design abilities has been matched by advances in the Apple Macintosh’s capabilities, so it has continued to be the ideal tool for me.
When I started building Macintosh bitmap fonts in 1984, it was a purely experimental endeavour. I didn’t have a client for these fonts, nor did I plan to start a type foundry. It was Emigre magazine that opened up these options. Rudy had started it (with two Dutch artists) as a showcase for émigré artists. Issue 3 was the turning point for my typeface experiments and for the magazine, as it was typeset entirely using my first low-res fonts. We had a lot of inquiries about the availability of these typefaces that no one had seen before. It was the start of Emigre Fonts.
For a while this turned me into a typesetter. Many of the designers who wanted to use my typefaces did not have a Macintosh, so I was selling typesetting with my fonts. As it turned out, the magazine provided me with a reason to continue developing these fonts, as well as a means to promote them. In turn, these unusual type designs contributed to the magazine’s unique character, while also providing an efficient means of typesetting. Using the Macintosh not only cut costs but added a level of design control that otherwise would have been mediated through an outside typesetting service.

RR: Can you describe your working methods?

ZL: While I work primarily on screen, sometimes I begin with rough thumbnail sketches, to give me an idea of the proportions or a detail of a character. Then I try out shapes and serif details directly in the Fontographer drawing window. The only hand drawing I do is on laser printouts, to mark areas that need adjustment, or to sketch alternate forms. Then I eyeball the corrections on screen. At any given time, I have several designs sitting on the back burner. Sometimes I put a design away when I hit a stumbling block, and it may take months or even years to resolve some of these design problems.

RR: In the 1980s your typefaces were criticised as being either ugly or hard to read. How do you look back on those reactions?

ZL: The establishment’s negative reaction towards new forms and technologies is natural. So if this work eventually becomes accepted, it’s a compliment in hindsight, because it means the work was truly innovative.

RR: What have been the most shocking or delightful uses of your typefaces?

ZL: Billboard use can be shocking because you have so little time to react as you’re driving by (Was that Base-9 I just saw?). I often cringe when these huge letters are tracked so tightly that their counters can’t breathe – as tends to be the case on billboards. This is particularly problematic with typefaces such as Base 9 and Citizen that need more breathing space than narrower ones. It makes me wonder how such billboard designs come about. Perhaps it’s premeditated: if the goal is to grab attention, then a jarring use of type will be more effective than a harmonious treatment.
Oddly, some of the most pleasing uses have been those that I didn’t recognise right away to be my typefaces. This sometimes happens in books where the typography and the typeface are so well blended in a traditional sense that the idiosyncrasies (which my typefaces tend to have) are downplayed.

RR: You recently re-released your original bitmap fonts (Emperor, Universal, Oakland and Emigre) from 1985 as the Lo-Res family. What was it like revisiting these typefaces fifteen years later?

ZL: It was interesting to see how much font and page-layout technologies have changed, and how font-making software has improved. The reasons for the re-release were mostly technical, to accommodate new possibilities or new restrictions. For example, when I originally released these fonts, the use of point sizes was limited to a basic set, usually 9, 10, 12, 14, 18 and 24 point. This was quite limiting because each size group of bitmap designs is on a different grid structure, which relates to its resolution; the number in each Lo-Res font name indicates the number of pixels in its body, or ppem (‘pixels per em’). Once the point size restriction was lifted, I was able to fine-tune the grid resolutions so that the capitals are in alignment when the resolutions are scaled to the same size. At the same time, I added the euro symbol, and made the font outlines compatible with recent technologies such as Flash. We also renamed the fonts under one family name, which made more sense within the context of our font library. I wouldn’t be surprised if we have to make additional updates after another fifteen years. We’re already gearing up for OpenType. This format (developed by Adobe and Microsoft) makes it possible to incorporate advanced typographic features into PostScript and TrueType fonts.

ZL: Which is your most popular typeface?

RR: To judge from the volume of sales and usage, it’s Mrs Eaves, my Baskerville revival. I see it everywhere: magazines, book covers, even the junk mail with my electric bill!

RR: How would you explain its success?

ZL: I think Mrs Eaves was a mix of just enough tradition with an updated twist. It’s familiar enough to be friendly, yet different enough to be interesting. Due to its relatively wide proportions, as compared with the original Baskerville, it’s useful for giving presence to small amounts of text such as poetry, or for elegant headlines and for use in print ads. It makes the reader slow down a bit and contemplate the message.

RR: How did you come to work with VanderLans?

ZL: We met at the University of California at Berkeley where I was an undergraduate at the College of Environmental Design and Rudy was a graduate student in photography. This was in 1982-83. After college we both did all sorts of design-related odd jobs. There was no direction. Then, in 1984 the Macintosh was introduced, we bought one, and everything started to fall into place. We both, each in our own way, really enjoyed this machine. It forced us to question everything we had learnt about design. We both enjoyed that process of exploration, of how far you could push the limits. Rudy is more intuitive; I’m more methodical. Yin and yang. It seemed to click, and still does.

RR: How do you deal with the challenges of working with your partner when the tradition of design partnerships often means that the woman gets less recognition?

ZL: Rudy and I are both very detail-oriented and hands-on. This makes it difficult for us to work together. I’m not a great collaborator and neither is he. It’s one reason why I switched my studies from architecture to graphics. I realised that having to compromise with so many outside opinions wouldn’t allow me the kind of creative freedom I desired. I’m no diplomat! Our Emigre collaboration works because we each control a distinct part of the equation. I control my typeface designs, Rudy controls the magazine, and Emigre is the symbiosis.
As for the gender-biased recognition, I don’t know what the perception is from the outside, but I feel that I do get as much recognition for my type designs as Rudy is getting for the magazine.
A bigger problem for me is that type designers in general are under-recognised. For example, it often happens that a graphic designer takes full credit for a logo, even when most of its character came from the typeface. Even other designers tend to forget that there is a high level of creativity in typeface design. So it’s not so much a problem of being a woman in a man’s world, it’s being a type designer in a world that gives little recognition to this art form, and I find this disillusioning.

RR: You named your Baskerville revival after Sarah Eaves, who became Baskerville’s wife and
finished printing the volumes he left incomplete on his death. Is the typographic world as male-dominated as it appears from the outside?

ZL: The history of type design is rooted in the use of heavy machinery and lead founding, which have traditionally not been considered women’s work. Today, the discipline is available to any artist who embraces computer technology, but it is one of the more technical specialities within visual design. A type designer does benefit from some understanding of computer programming – another field that women traditionally seldom enter, though maybe this will change. Certainly, the field of type design is more open to women than it ever has been.

RR: How is your personal style and personal philosophy (such as your commitment to recycling) reflected in your work? How do you see the designer’s responsibility in these times?

ZL: To live in harmony with our environment, we will need to treat all life and material as precious. There can be no ‘waste’ because there is no black hole on this planet for its disposal, and storing it ultimately degrades the quality of life. The key to getting rid of waste is to rethink the way we use materials. For example, a container shouldn’t become waste as soon as it’s emptied. Next, we need to realise that what we do at home and at work are connected.
At home I can make the effort to wash an empty container out, then re-use or recycle it. At work, I can take the effort to design a container that is more easily re-usable and recyclable. But neither action will be nearly half as effective as when I do both. This is a very simple example, but I think you get the idea.

RR: Does this ethic show up in your work itself, in addition to your environment?

ZL: Maybe I should be more specific. I was using ‘container’ as a metaphor. It could be the choice of disk packaging or the paper we choose for a catalogue, or any other carrier of product or information. For example, whenever possible we print the Emigre type catalogues on 100 per cent recycled paper, which contains 50 per cent post-consumer waste, and the paper is processed chlorine free. We print 60,000 of these catalogues each year, so the choice of paper makes a significant difference. In addition, we avoid marcoating and other treatments that make the print work less recyclable.

RR: You’ve written that the catalyst for Hypnopaedia patterns was the lack of copyright for typeface designs (the patterns were created by the rotation of a single letterform from the Emigre library). Are you actively involved in such legal issues?

ZL: We address them in the Emigre catalogue and magazine. We do our best to stay informed about changing font technologies and to help establish fair usage standards. It’s something I’d rather not have to spend time on, but it’s a necessity for keeping our business in business. Typefaces are designed by people who rely on sales in order to continue investing in the development of new designs. We try to bring this message across in a variety of ways, and the Hypnopaedia design turned out to be a visual example of the basic copyright issue involved. One problem is that people find it difficult to distinguish between the ornamental design of letterforms and the alphabetic characters that they represent. As a result there is no us copyright protection for letterform designs, because they are seen as purely utilitarian. By rotating the letter designs, taking them out of context and turning them into textures, the Hypnopaedia patterns allow us to make this distinction and appreciate letter shapes on another level, abstracted from their function as alphabetic characters. (Although the design of a typeface is not protected by us copyright, the font software is covered by copyright, which does greatly protect our intellectual property.)

RR: What other type designers do you think are doing interesting work now?

ZL: Much of the interesting type design work these days is being done by individuals. This is a testament to pc technology, which has made the independent type industry possible by decentralising the design of typefaces and production of fonts. This has tremendously increased the choice of typefaces, since it no longer requires a committee of corporate executives to approve investment in the development of a typeface. However, the next phase of sophistication, OpenType, may once again take the manufacture of type beyond the reach of independent type designers. The complexities of designing huge character sets are extremely time-consuming, with diminishing returns (as few of the additional characters may be used by the average user).

RR: Are there specific type designers who you think are doing particularly innovative work?

ZL: Too many to list here, and too many to overlook, which would just get me into a heap of trouble. But every typeface that we’ve licensed for the Emigre library is designed by someone who I feel is doing very innovative work. I’m impressed and amazed by other people’s work all the time. That’s how we end up licensing other people’s designs.

RR: Increasingly, information is being accessed primarily onscreen in websites, kiosks and signage. In addition, the screens are getting smaller as cell phones, watches and control panels carry more information. How do you see typography evolving to meet this challenge?

ZL: The presentation of information on digital devices will change profoundly once the resolution of the displays (lcds or otherwise) quadruples. At that point, screen displays will be able to show just about any design that can be printed. With the present display resolutions the typography and the organisation of information needs to be very clean and efficient in order to maximise the use of every pixel. I don’t think we’re making the best use of the current technologies: too often it seems that the design of the screen information was hacked together by someone on the product design team, almost as an afterthought. Professional type designers, typographers, graphic designers and information designers are getting left out of the equation because the manufacturers don’t recognise the importance of the visual interface. Try programming your vcr – I’m sure you’ll think of at least three visual interface improvement suggestions right off the bat!

RR: What new Zuzana Licko typeface release can we look forward to next?

ZL: I’ve had a serif text face in the works for more than a year now, but I’ve had to put it away for
the time being due to the upgrade work. Most of the fonts in the Emigre library were released prior to the announcement of the euro currency, so we have to go back and design this character for every font. Since this requires fonts to be regenerated, I’m taking the opportunity to tweak them and
add features.
There is a dilemma with my older designs in that I’m often tempted to change details that I would have treated differently if I were designing the typeface today. But, of course, I don’t want to go so far as to change the character of the design; sometimes it’s difficult to draw that line.

RR: What do you think is the most important thing you have learnt?

ZL: That nothing is permanent, yet there is much value in the reincarnation of classics.


Copyright eye magazine © 2001.
eyemagazine.com is sponsored by artificial environments.
Site credits.

05/03/2008

História da tipografia através dos tempos

>


Clip contendo um pequeno resumo imagético da evolução caligráfica/tipográfica do homem desde tempos remotos.
From: Matfutura
Added: August 03, 2006
Category: Film & Animation
Tags: tipografia