Sunday, September 6, 2009

New Type Fonts

7 comments:

  1. Wait... do you mean, typeballs? I am not versed on the Selectric lingo.

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  2. James: Very cool collection! The script looks fantastic. Plus, your OCR is far prettier than the one I have.

    Strikethru: Oh yes, typeballs. Or "elements," if ya wanna get fancy. Of course you would be more familiar with them if you relented and acquired a Selectric...

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  3. That's just plain fun. Pretty script you've got there, and the old English is exquisite.

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  4. So, uh, James, does this mean that now you have a lot of balls?

    (Could. Not. Resist.)

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  5. And- if you're interested in the pre-wordprocessing language of graphic design, "font" meant the "pitch," or the size of the type (10pt, 16pt, etc.). The different kinds of alphabets were known as a "typestyle," or a "typeface" (such as Baskerville, Garamond, Helvetica, etc.) I always loved Gill Sans.

    I studied typesetting just a few years before nobody needed a typesetter anymore! We used phototypositors in art college- just before they disappeared (in the early 90s) from print shops. In typesetting lingo, you "composed with type."
    I wonder if IBM Selectrics had an element with the typeface, "Park Avenue." Very classy look!

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  6. The OCR typeface is very similar to one Remington called Art Gothic back in the '30s. And admittedly, Old English (Textur?) is much more readable to English-speakers than Fraktur.

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  7. Love the "Old English" and Greek! If only they did Caroline miniscule . . .

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