It is available from myfonts.com and fontspring.com.
Monday, December 14, 2020
Revising JennerikInfml
Saturday, December 12, 2020
Letters almost kissing
Earlier this year I used the OpenType feature of contextual alternatives to alternate letter shapes that snuggled together such as letters based on trapezoids or concave/convex shapes. In October I wondered if I could do better with concave/convex lettering than I had done in Lentzers and set out to design a font with greater curvature and much tightly letter spacing. The result is the three-font family of CloseTogether.
Wednesday, December 9, 2020
Balance, Harmony, and a new font
Looking for shapes or symbols that could be used for alternating letters using the OpenType feature contextual alternatives, I noticed that the yin yang symbol offered possibilities. A bit of work and the result was the two font family of YinYangMessages. In the picture below the both fonts are used in layers. The bold style has the dark side on the right and is below the regular style, which has the dark side on the right. YinYangMessages is fun font family without a lot of obvious uses.
The letters in the interiors are modified from YassitfCondensed. YinYangMessages is available from fontspring.
Friday, December 4, 2020
A return to calt
In May I bid farewell to calt. In November I welcomed it back.
ButterflyWings and OpenBook are two new typeface families that use the Opentype feature of contextual alternatives (calt) to alternate two sets of characters. Earlier in 2020 I designed several typeface using this feature, but they alternated sets of characters that fit together such as convex and concave blocks. In these new faces the alternating sets are two sides of a symmetrical object, in one case open books and the other butterfly wings. I am unaware of anyone else who has done typefaces similar to these.
Sunday, November 29, 2020
A unexpected encounter
While traveling through Watseka, Illinois recently, I stopped for gas and went inside the attached convenience store. I noticed some lettering that looked familiar so I took a quick picture so I could check it when I returned home.
A look at my font Brrrrr, a font I designed thirty years ago, showed that it was the font used. I wonder how they found it.Friday, November 20, 2020
Additions to FlyHigh
FlyHigh is a decorative slab-serif family that was designed in 1996. It has a low x-height and works better for decorative purposes such as invitations than for book text. Originally it had the standard four styles of regular, italic, bold, and bolditalic. In 2020 the family was expanded with new styles of semibold, semibolditalic, extrabold, and extrabold italic. The new styles are shown in yellow below.
Monday, November 9, 2020
More Kwalett
I have expanded the new Kwalett family from 10 to 20 styles by creating a set of narrow widths. The narrow set of fonts has the same weights as the original styles: thin, light, regular, semibold, and bold, and each comes with an italics style. Below the original styles are in white and the new narrow styles are in yellow. Notice that each word contains two styles, the upright and matching italics.
Below the thin narrow and thin styles are contrasted at the top and the bold italics and the bold italics narrow styles are contrasted at the bottom.