Register  ▪  Login  ▪  Current Issue  ▪  Calendar  ▪  Advertise
search
Skip Navigation Links
Resources
Inspiration
Competitions
Directory
Education
DesignCasts
Print Blog
Shop
About Us
Schriftkunstler_375_NEW.jpg
 Studio Lettering designed by Ken Barber.
 
About the Author
Paul Shaw is principal of Paul Shaw/Letter Design in New York City. He teaches at the School of Visual Arts and at Parsons School of Design.

 
More Hot Type
Want more Hot Type?  Check out Scotch Modern and Contempo Elan.

 

Studio Lettering

by Paul Shaw
Share/Save/Bookmark


Type design is increasingly becoming type programming. Designers such as Ken Barber of House Industries are taking advantage of “smart” type features in programs like InDesign, and expanding the criteria used to activate contextual alternates (ligatures, for instance).

A specialist in script fonts, Barber aims not to make a line of text smoother and easier to read—the traditional typographic Holy Grail—but to make it livelier and more natural. Studio Lettering, a set of three scripts and a pi font, achieves this in some expected, as well as some unexpected, ways.

To give each script a unique personality, Barber used a different tool: a Speedball Steel Brush for Slant, a Payzant pen (similar in its effect to a Speedball B-series nib) for Swing, and a pointed brush for Sable. Yet they all share a similar set of contextual alternates. Most are aesthetically driven and some culturally derived. Alternate characters that vary in size, form, and the way they join together, including special large initial caps, provide more rhythm to a text. They make words and phrases appear to be hand-lettered rather than typeset.

Barber has supplemented these alternates, common in many OpenType script fonts, with innovative “colloquial” alternates, unique characters based on the forms that certain letters take due to the differing handwriting systems and habits in each country. Thanks to Tal Leming’s programming, a user can select a different language in the computer’s preference settings and produce a new version of any word with letterforms peculiar to a specific language or country. It is an audacious idea—and lots of fun. Olé! Bravo! Encore! PAUL SHAW

This article appears in the December 2008  issue of Print.

Reader Comments
Login to add a comment. Not a registered user? Register Now!

Adobe Presents: Transform Photoshop or Illustrator Artwork with Flash Catalyst




Wednesday, Sept. 8, 4pm EST

This free DesignCast will show you how to transform artwork created in Photoshop or Illustrator into high-quality interactive content that can liven up your web pages or make complex information engaging and easier to understand. Design simple projects in SWF format or tackle more complex projects built in collaboration with a developer. This webcast will guide you through the creation of a Flash Catalyst project using CS5 Design Premium.


Sign up for this free DesignCast today!
Follow us / Join us:
 
Facebook  Flickr StumbleUpon Twitter
 
Share  Share this page with your friends.
Image of the Day

 
Bibliotheque, Identity & packaging concept for Space.NK.Men

 
Most Recent Articles
Three Nonprofits Offer Insight into the Changing Sustainability Debate
Work With Us: Intern at Print
A Book Cover Anthology: Penguin Turns 75
Beyond Foamcore: James Victore Crafts a Cover for Print
The Complex Bonds Between Design and Surrealism
Most Popular

Carry Hope

13 designers create a custom tote bag for their favorite charity. Featuring the work of: Atelier Télescopique, Büro Destruct, Christoph Niemann, Deanne Cheuk, Ed Fella, Geoff McFetridge, Hort, James Joyce, Laurent Fetis, Rick Valicenti, Si Scott, Spin, and Sawdust. Order one today!
 
 
Check Out Past Issues

Subscribe to Print and get all 6 issues for just $40

In This Issue
Original art and strong opinions from Art Chantry, Joe Duffy, Barbara Glauber, Michael Ian Kaye, Oded Ezer, and many others. Also: regular columnists Rick Poynor on Surrealism, Khoi Vinh on the rise of apps, and Paul Shaw on Veljovic Script. Cover by James Victore.
See the complete Table of Contents

 
 
Skip Navigation Links
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
Site Map
Copyright © 2010 by F+W Media.