Aug 14, 2010

Why/why not to use free fonts on a design project?

Free Fonts: Technical And Artistic Quality

What comes next may sound biased to some readers, yet I simply can’t help it – it’s the reality of the situation. The vast majority of the free fonts out there are – to put it mildly – of inferior quality. And although a very small percentage is fit for professional use, statistics tell us you’ll more likely stumble upon – to put it mildly again – less successful creations. Because most free font websites are cluttered un-curated swamps, there is no quality control at all. An additional problem is that you don’t even know what you’re downloading. Is it a genuine free font? Or could it be an unauthorized clone, a pirated and renamed commercial font, or a stolen proprietary face? If this seems trivial to you, maybe read through my account of the tragic Hadopi story.

So proceed with caution. Here’s a list of things you definitely need to check when picking a free font for a design.

Artistic quality of the design

Say whatever you want, but the vast majority of the offerings on free font websites are poorly designed. Most of them are well-intentioned efforts by students, amateurs, and beginning designers. You may know what an “a” is supposed to look like, but digitizing that “a” using Bézier curves is another matter entirely. To use a metaphor – I can perfectly describe the different parts of a shoe and know how they fit together, but I couldn’t make a shoe to save my life. Very often the design of free fonts suffer from typical beginners’ mistakes: awkward proportions, poor thick-thin contrast, missing optical corrections, clumsy transitions from curves to straight lines and inversely, ill-balanced and misshapen letter forms, … we can go on and on. Before using a free font, make sure to carefully evaluate the complete character set for quality and consistency.


I didn’t do anything to improve the spacing and kerning on the sample above; this is the font used “out of the box”.
The popular freeware font above is a perfect example of a poorly drawn typeface. It may seem acceptable at first sight, but examining the design more closely reveals its many flaws. Besides the fact that the overall design tries hard but ultimately fails – that lowercase “e” and “g”! –, the actual drawings of the glyphs are littered with mistakes. To pick just one character – you can see the bottom of the bowl of the “a” is too high (no optical correction), the lower left part of the curve flattens unexpectedly, while the top left part has a nasty bump. Both the thinning at the top of the bowl, the spot where it joins the stem, and the weight progression in the top arc are very awkward. And there’s another bump where the straight line transitions in the top curve.

Read more about type design on Unzipped:
An Introduction to Type Design | The Type Designer as Artist
An Introduction to Type Design | The Type Designer as Craftsman

Technical quality of the drawing

Of course tastes vary. I myself quite like awkward if it is done well, like Christian Schwartz’s delectable Los Feliz, modeled after vernacular signage found in the Los Feliz area of Los Angeles. And the whole grunge movement thrived on DIY aesthetics – think for example of Barry Deck’s imperfect designs which were very popular in the late nineties, or the carefully balanced inconsistency of Mr. Keedy’s eponymous typeface. Personally I think there is a world of difference between voluntary and involuntary awkwardness, but truth is we can discuss about this until we are blue in the face.


Los Feliz was inspired by amateur lettering, and professionally digitised.


This free font is a true amateur design. Personally I think there is a world of difference between this one and Los Feliz, but I don’t expect everyone to agree.

However – disregarding matters of taste – technical quality can be assessed objectively. Professional fonts are well digitised, with economic and efficient outlines that adhere to the rules of sound construction. Many free fonts feature glyph shapes with superfluous vectors and node points, faulty combinations of elements, stray points, incorrect overlaps, bad connections, … These technical flaws can cause the files those fonts are used in to behave erratically, and produce errors when processing said files (export to PDF, output on film or direct-to-plate, integration in Flash, …). The font is automatically substituted by a system font, certain characters disappear, counters are filled in, accents are displaced and show up in the wrong spot, spacing is shot to hell causing characters to overlap, … all kinds of problems whose precise origins are difficult to track down, and solving them usually takes a long time and a lot of trial and error. Unfortunately this type of technical flaws is very difficult to detect for the layman. The only advice I can offer here is to run a bunch of tests beforehand, like converting text to outlines, doing test prints and conversions, and so on.

Available styles

Professional text faces always include all the necessary styles, and often many more. On the other hand, if you want to use a free font for text applications, first you have to consider if everything needed for producing professional text setting is included. Most free fonts are single fonts, not families. Is there an italic style available? Is it a properly designed italic, or merely a mechanically slanted roman? If a bold is included, was it artificially emboldened? Is it bold enough, or too bold? Do you need an even heavier weight? Are the glyph shapes clear enough to remain legible in small sizes? And what about small caps and different sets of figures? It is of utmost importance to ask yourself these questions up front. This way you’ll avoid painting yourself in a corner when you notice halfway the production that the font you selected is inadequate. The available styles are very easy to check; however you need a trained eye to assess the quality of italics and bolds.

Read more about type weights and styles in Styles, Weights, Widths — It’s All in the (Type) Family.

Comprehensiveness of the character set

When acquiring professional fonts you can sleep on both ears. They will include both upper and lower case*, numerals, a complete set of punctuation, ligatures, mathematical symbols, and at least cover all North, West and Southern European languages, and often Central and Eastern European and Turkish, and sometimes even Greek and Cyrillic.
* A small numbers of display faces only have capitals.


FF Kava started out as a free typeface called Kaffeesatz, published by Yanone in 2004 during the early stages of his type designing career. When it transitioned from free font to commercial font, the character set more than tripled from 203 glyphs – which already is impressive for a free font – to 747 glyphs. Read the complete story and try it out in FF Kava With Extra Flavour.

Free and shareware fonts however are often restricted to the standard 26 letters of the alphabet, figures, and only the bare minimum of punctuation marks. It is quite common that suddenly you realize you can’t type that French name or that German idiom, nor put a ® next to a brand name nor a € next to a price, or that some punctuation mark is missing. So the first thing you need to do is go over the complete character set – for example in the “Glyph” window in Adobe Illustrator or InDesign – to see if everything you need is included.

Read more about the value of full families and complete character sets in FontShop’s Type Selection: Beyond the Look of the Letter.

Spacing and kerning

Strictly speaking anybody can draw letters – admittedly one typeface will look nicer than the next. However most people don’t realize the quality of a font is in large part defined by the “nothingness” between those letters – its spacing and kerning tables. Without proper spacing and kerning it is merely a random collection of glyphs, not truly a font. Spacing a font well is a painstaking, demanding, and time-consuming activity, and professional fonts also include hundreds of kerning pairs for all the exceptions. Proper spacing and kerning ensure that every single letter combination, every single sequence of characters – as diverse as they may be – are perfectly spaced, so that the text is well balanced and perfectly readable. And this is where almost all free fonts are found lacking.

The message here is again – do extensive testing if you want to use a free font. Set several blocks of text in different point sizes, and “feel” the rhythm as you read. Try to detect stuttering, gaps, anything that hinders the flow. And be prepared to do a lot of this if you want to stick to free fonts, because it will take some time before you find a properly spaced and kerned one.

via FontFeed.

Aug 10, 2010

Identity Inspiration - Stitch





STITCH is a design company based in Charleston, South Carolina run by designers Amy Pastre & Courtney Rowson.
via Graphic-Exchange
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Gourmet Typography

Gourmet Typography returns to SVA in NYC
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svaOnce again, Ilene teaches her ever-popular Gourmet Typography class at School of Visual Arts in NYC. Take control of your type instead of letting it control you. Learn the typographic skills and secrets of type experts, including selecting the right typeface, mixing type, techniques for emphasis, fine-tuning your type, kerning and spacing, as well as typographic do’s and don’ts. This course will raise the level of your design and production skills and instill an excitement and passion for typography. Check it out...


Upcoming Typography Workshops & Events
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handEvery creative professional, including the most seasoned designer, can benefit from learning to communicate more effectively with type. This workshop will give you the expert-level typographic skills and aesthetics necessary to visibly improve your type. It will sharpen your eye and reignite your passion for typography.

Gourmet Typography
AIGA Orlando
Orlando, Florida
September 17

Type Rules! 3rd edition book signing and talk: 10 Worst Type Crimes
TDC
New York, NY
September 30

TypeTalk: Why Distorting Type Is a Crime

TypeTalk is a regular blog on typography. Post your questions and comments by clicking on the Comments icon above.

Q. Why is stretching or squeezing type in headlines considered a type crime? I occasionally get this request from art directors, clients, and marketing. I know it's considered wrong, but I don’t know how to reply to them.

A. Distorting type in any way, whether it be stretching, squeezing (AKA squishing), or slanting, is a type crime of the highest degree. It distorts the proportions in a way that destroys the integrity of the letter shapes. It can also reduce legibility by creating a fun-house effect.

You can see the effects of artificially condensing a typeface in the Futura example below. It has its own condensed version that maintains pleasing curves and the minimal stroke contrast of the regular version. The computer-scaled version to the far right fails miserably in comparison, with its ugly egg-shaped contours and exaggerated stroke contrast.

Check out the difference between Futura Oblique and the computer-generated slanted version below. The fake slanted version on the right has a more distorted shape, as well as uneven and exaggerated stroke contrast.

Finally, observe the unpleasant result of stretching Univers. The true-drawn extended version, second from the left, looks far better than the two examples of computer stretching on the right.

A way to avoid these requests for artificial distortions is to pick a typeface or type family that contains legitimate, true-drawn width variants. When created by a skillful type designer, a width variant maintains the weight contrast between thick and thins; the relationships of the horizontals and verticals; the axis of the character stress of italics (when applicable); the thickness and integrity of the serifs, if any; the overall width of character; and the spacing.

Don't give in to these requests to "set to fit" or fill in white space! Instead, work with the chosen typefaces and other elements to make a successful composition and overall design.

Love type? Want to know more? Ilene Strizver conducts her acclaimed Gourmet Typography workshops internationally. For more information on attending one or bringing it to your company, organization, or school, go to her site, call The Type Studio at 203-227-5929, or email Ilene at info@thetypestudio.com. Sign up for her e-newsletter at www.thetypestudio.com.

Brooklyn Museum identity by 2x4

Check out 2x4's other amazing design work, here.
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Important Notice - Grading

Arrange all your projects appropriately and post the final pieces on your blogs so that Genevieve could go through them quickly for grading.

Please, remember that she has four courses this summer and must do the grading in a five hour window right after Wednesday night class.

Please, DO DOUBLE CHECK THAT YOU HAVE TURNED OFF WORD VERIFICATION IN YOUR BLOG SETTINGS. (She will not grade if she must deal with word verification on each and every blog entry.)
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Aug 5, 2010

Album Covers Inspired By Blue Note Records via FontFeed

Almost Blue — Album Covers Inspired By Blue Note Records

This year Blue Note Records celebrate the 70th anniversary of the label’s founding by Alfred Lion (as well as the 25th anniversary of the label’s re-launch in 1984). It is hard to miss – it is the only record label that puts its inception date in the logo. Blue Note Records have exerted a profound influence not only on 20th century music but also on graphic design. As this perfectly fits in our My Type of Music series I’ve tried to find an angle to write something about the seminal covers that graced their records. Though I admire the designs, with a preference for the bold 50s and 60s releases, I must admit I know very little about the history and background, nor about legendary Blue Note art director Reid Miles who was with the label from 1956 to 1965. His sleeves are collected in Blue Note: Album Cover Art - The Ultimate Collection, the paperback compendium of both Chronicle’s classic Blue Note: The Album Cover Art and Blue Note II, and the history of the label is told in Blue Note Records: The Biography. There are also a number of galleries on the internet, like this one on Pixagogo which has the designs in random order, and the Japanese Vintage Vanguard gallery which lists all the releases from 1950 to 1969 in chronological order.

Typical of Reid Miles’ style is the dramatic cropping of photographs, black and white images on flat colour with knocked out type, striking compositions, and use of rhythmical elements. His typographic treatments are flawless. Whether it’s classic serif type or dynamic, sometimes even experimental sans serif typography, he uses a recognisable and consistent type palette. Type is arranged asymmetrically, stacked, in waterfall, and is even used to crop the image. Miles occasionally experiments with punctuation, multiple readings, repetition, type as image, cut up and distorted type. In many of his designs he inverts the hierarchy by having the type play the lead role, and relegating the photograph of the artist to a tiny little box.

Doing more research yesterday – I know I wasn’t supposed to because May Day is a holiday here, but hey, sue me – I stumbled upon an interesting gallery on community site Rate Your Music. RYM user Monocle (alias for Michael Sean) seems to have a thing for album covers and lists. One of his album cover galleries is Almost Blue, an overview of sleeves that are based on specific releases by Blue Note Records, or that are designed to evoke the classic Blue Note cover art style. Many of Reid Miles’ designs still look ground-breaking today, so it is understandable that contemporary graphic designers sometimes refer to his work. To me it is not always clear whether these new album covers are homages or plain rip-offs, as it is indeed a fine line. Below is a selection of covers from the Monocle gallery – make sure to visit it for more examples. I have added the originals for comparison and some information about the typefaces. The first batch of covers are inspired by – and sometimes even straight-up copies of – specific Blue Note albums.

This one is cheating a bit, because Yule Struttin’ is also a Blue Note Records release. The jumpy Helvetica Inserat nicely visualises the album title(s).

Although the pose is identical (albeit different cropping) the Clarendon used in the original was replaced by a hand drawn serif face and a signature-like treatment of the artist’s name.

The Madness The Heavy Heavy Hits compilation mimics the cut-up typography of Horace Parlan’s Us Three but sticks to Compacta instead of the eclectic mix in the original.

The You Am I cover was originally listed in the section Covers That Mimic the General Blue Note Look, but I’m pretty sure it references Miles Davis (All Stars) Vol. 1 & 2. Futura is completely miscast: I don’t remember ever seen it used like this on a Reid Miles cover. They’d better have stuck with the wide grotesque which I believe is Annonce Grotesque (very similar to an extended Venus, now available as Vonness from The Font Bureau, Inc.).

This one is almost literally lifted except for changing the condensed Basic Commercial into ITC Frankin Condensed. The photographic treatment is so much stronger in the original, and it nicely illustrates why the originals of these covers are unequalled.

In the Midnight Blue sleeve the “g” of Aurora Condensed in “midnight” was customised to make it fit above “blue”. The credits are set in News Gothic on the left, and Franklin Gothic Extra Condensed on the right.

Although it enhances the “Blue Note style”, the black bar at the top of the James Taylor Quartet album cover renders it a little claustrophobic. The – perfectly positioned – Aurora Condensed in the original was replaced by a condensed grotesque paired with a Clarendon.

I think we can safely classify this one as satire – a denture!? Helvetica is wrong; it should have been Basic Commercial. The use of News Gothic is consistent.

This design shows how a little change in attitude can alter the atmosphere in a design. I was intrigued by the “Wrecker” on the right – it looks a bit like a customised Antique Olive Nord but it is in fact quite different, most notable the “C”. FontFeed reader William Hastings revealed it is Information Bold Extended, a font that has sadly become unavailable in digital format.

FontFeed reader Tracy Graham pointed out the obvious similarities in the above covers. This is one of the designs where the Blue Note Records logo also is remixed. It’s a shame the digitally condensed Helvetica looks awful – Helvetica Ultra Compressed is much closer to the original.

Some album covers reference Blue note covers more subtly, and one might even wonder if the tribute was intentional.

The second section in Monocle’s list showcases album covers that mimic the classic Blue Note look but are not derived from any specific sleeve. The Raphael Saadiq and Joe Jackson covers are not in the list; they are from two My Type of Music reviews.




And Reid Miles’ influence even crosses over to moving images. In 2004 Burning Vision Entertainment produced a music video for Helicopter Girl’s Angel City. The surprising video interprets the art from various Blue Note LP sleeves. It all looks fabulous, except for the totally inappropriate use of Arial in a couple of screens and some dubious wavy transitions in the text. I know I sound like a broken record – a fitting metaphor in this context – but they could have gone the extra length and chosen their typefaces a bit more carefully. I have added eight of the album sleeves the video is based on for comparison.





FontFeed reader Aleksander Nikolić notified me of another video referencing Blue Note Records album covers. In Gabin’s Into My Soul featuring Dee Dee Bridgewater from 2005 the frame occasionally freezes and type is added to it to make it look like an album sleeve, without mimicking any specific one. This video is by Italian director Daniele Per­sica.



via My Type of Music - FontFeed
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Assignment.

Our last assignment is Personal Identity/Self Branding.

1. Finish up all your work. Business card, leave behind booklet printed and bound also in PDF form, Web/blog.

2. Put up all your finished work on your blogs.


NOTE: Keep in mind that usually a portfolio has 10-12 pieces. However for the time being you could make a mini portfolio if you don't have that much projects.
You could use your previous work that makes sense.
Give each project it's own spread. If the project is extensive it may take more than one spread. Do not place two different projects on one spread.
You could photograph your pieces and use those or you could use flat files. (Whatever makes sense.)
Be creative with the format, bounding and presentation.

Have fun,
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Type Education - Font Shop


Typography Tips from FontShop’s New Education Page

FontShop.com is more than a site that sells fonts — we want to help you do great work too. That’s why we created our new Education page. Enhance your design skills, whether you’re a student in Type 101 or a seasoned professional.

Education Page

The Education page premieres with four docs filled with typography tips and tutorials from our team of experts. The PDFs are formatted for easy downloading and printing, perfect for the classroom or studio.

Education Features

Meet Your Type
A Field Guide to Typography

Meet Your Type

Why settle for casual flirtation when looking for a long-lasting relationship? Finding the perfect match is easy if you know the rules. “Meet Your Type” will help you overcome common obstacles, and keep your heart thumping for your one true love: typography.

Created in collaboration with students at Brigham Young University, this fully illustrated booklet is written in a casual, light-hearted tone that’s easy to read, and hard to put down. Packed with useful textbook info — without the boring textbook text.

Download Meet Your Type on the Education page »

Aug 2, 2010

Infographics

Mobile Advertising by Tiffany Farrant - tiffanyfarrant.co.uk

Burning Man by Flint Hahn - xmasons.com

AH AND OH

AH and OH is a design studio located in Polnad.
They're new to the industry but make very inventive and visually attractive stuff.
Check them out... might help you get some ideas for the 4th assignment.
Click on the image:


Aug 1, 2010

Brands of brand designers


Brands of logo designers, brand identity consultants and graphic studios.

Left to right from top to bottom:
Siegel+Gale
Wolff Olins
Entermotion
Publicis Groupe S.A.
TYPO Interactive Design Inc.
Fantique
Simon & Goetz Design
Pentagram
Fitch
Vanderbyl
Gemma
LLdesign
Muamer
160over90
Tom Cannon Design
Kane+Associates
BrandBerry
Brandcore
Duffy & Partners
Lance Wyman Ltd.
Neogrey Creative
Mono
Design:Success
Denis Olenik
Double Brand
Dache
De Masi Jones
Nomadesign

Data Flow I&II - Visualizing Information in Graphic Design

Data Flow
Visualizing Information in Graphic Design














Data Flow and Data Flow 2 are great resources for info-graphics.
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