Monthly Archives: March 2009

Variations on a Theme

Paperfont

Paper­font for Neo2 mag­a­zine. Cus­tom type for every issue by Ipsum Planet.
Folded Paper

Folded Paper by Daniella Spinat.
Folded-Font

Folded-​​Font in stan­dard A4 paper by Vienna’s BUSK, via Let­ter­Cult.
Fold Font

Fold Font, by James Machin.
The Folded

The Folded, by Anton Studer for Neo2 magazine.

Posted in Print, Typography | Comments closed

Hello, Mister Kafka

(FF Mis­ter K spec­i­men, from Font­Font on Behance.)

Sadly, infor­ma­tion online regard­ing Julia Sys­mäläi­nen‘s FF Mis­ter K—beyond regur­gi­tat­ing the orig­i­nal press release—appears sparse, save for an excel­lent post on the Font Feed. The abridged ver­sion: Ms. Sys­mäläi­nen, of eden­spiek­er­mann, struck by the grace of Franz Kafka’s hand­writ­ing has dig­i­tized the script for our enjoy­ment. The fam­ily con­sists of three faces, Reg­u­lar, Onstage and Crossout, each with exten­sive lig­a­tures and alternates.

Please take this as fur­ther evi­dence of my grow­ing love affair with Open­Type hand­writ­ing faces.

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Job Security? Become a Pressman

Print­ing as a voca­tion attracts many young and women, because it offers real oppor­tu­ni­ties for steady work, good pay and advancement.

Job secu­rity, sta­ble earn­ings. Sounds good. Per­haps you’d like to cross-​​train on a Lino­type machine.

For the record, I think about this line of edu­ca­tion every day.

Posted in Design, Print, Technology, Typography | Comments closed

Honour to the Woods Unshorn

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Brickworks

A few shots from my recent trip to Toronto.

This is the Don Val­ley Brick­works, presently under re-​​construction at the hands of the Ever­green Foun­da­tion, as of Decem­ber 8th. No stranger to tres­pass­ing, I missed my chance to get inside this amaz­ing space, as the site was indeed quite busy.

Despite the pos­i­tive notion of adap­tive reuse, tak­ing form with a sum­mer mar­ket, and Evergreen’s own Cen­tre for Urban Sus­tain­abil­ity, instead of con­tin­ued aban­don­ment, or inevitable bulldozing–I did note the occa­sional dis­sent­ing (‘Ever­greed’) graf­fiti pep­per­ing the site (as have oth­ers, evi­dently.)

Posted in Personal, Photography | Comments closed

Victoria Burnout

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The houses and busi­nesses of Vic­to­ria Park are slowly being felled one at a time as the vic­tims of neglect, mis­use, and encroach­ing devel­op­ment. For the last few years I’ve taken it upon myself to doc­u­ment what remains, along with their some­times gen­tle and some­times vio­lent dis­in­te­gra­tion. There isn’t much left.

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An Expression of Joy


BMW is work­ing with South African artist Robin Rhode to pro­mote the BMW brand, the Z4 Road­ster, and osten­si­bly Rhode’s own work with another instal­la­tion of their long-​​running part­ner­ship with the arts via it’s BMW Art Cars program.

Rhode has pre­vi­ously come to light when Nike SB took heavy ‘inspi­ra­tion’ from his pieces as the basis of a series of adver­tis­ments fea­tur­ing Paul Rodriguez.

His work with BMW on the sur­face appears to be a long stretch from his foun­da­tion as a per­for­mance artist, in many cases being site-​​specific. In ‘Leak’ (2000), Rhode refenced Duchamp’s ready­made ‘Foun­tain’ (1917) by uri­nat­ing on a hand-​​drawn uri­nal inscribed on the wall of Cape Town’s South African National Gallery. Fur­ther:

Rhode’s visual and con­cep­tual alpha­bet is built around issues of desire, loss, and dis­lo­ca­tion in a cap­i­tal­ist world while also acknowl­edg­ing the spe­cific indig­ni­ties of grow­ing up “col­ored” in for­merly apartheid South Africa. For instance, Park Bench (2000) was a life-​​size draw­ing of said object on the wall of the Par­lia­ment build­ing in Cape Town, in an area that used to be off-​​limits to all but white South Africans. Dressed in dark, hooded cloth­ing asso­ci­ated with trouble-​​making youths, Rhode then pro­ceeded to loi­ter around his bench and was even­tu­ally arrested for defam­ing state prop­erty. [–Walker Art]

It would seem to me BMW wants des­per­ately to iden­tify with Rhode’s rebel­lious streak. I see that more to be a rep­re­sen­ta­tion of…

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No Letter Is An Island

Type sample by Luciano Perondi.

Type sample by Luciano Perondi.

Regard­ing the design of char­ac­ters, I believe it is espe­cially essen­tial to do so by hand, where one can observe the cal­li­graphic char­ac­ter. […Work­ing dig­i­tally] lim­its of the very vision of the designer. In any case I believe that the design of char­ac­ters is a com­plex issue and should be [evo­lu­tion­ary, so as] not to over-​​design. In design­ing courses I choose a spe­cific topic, but very wide and with just a mod­er­ate amount of restric­tions and para­me­ters to be met, because vio­lat­ing the rules is eas­ier than cre­at­ing alone, and the most orig­i­nal fol­low the oppo­site path. [–Trans­la­tion via Google, with some cleanup. Orig­i­nal.]

I’ve spent the evening search­ing and turned up very lit­tle English-​​language infor­ma­tion on this face, much less exam­ples in use. Com­mis­sioned by the Uni­ver­sità Iuav di Venezia, and designed by Luciano Per­ondi in 2004 for use in Venice’s wayfind­ing sys­tems, it’s not read­ily appar­ent to me if this face was ever actively used for way­far­ing in the pub­lic realm. That said, I’m awfully enam­oured with Min­io­type‘s char­ac­ter at large sizes, and sur­pris­ingly del­i­cate grace when set small.

We think of signs–the task is to bring a per­son from one place to another but can be [visu­ally] very strong, even evoca­tive. Per­haps we need to reas­sure the user of a dan­ger, or sim­ply make them feel com­fort­able in an ele­gant place. [These are] mes­sages that are not attrib­ut­able solely to writ­ing, but also to a form of rhetoric of another type; a

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Invaded

Tor­b­jørn Brundt­land, the other half, goes on to con­found the sim­plic­ity of Berge’s descrip­tion, “Mak­ing this new album was like min­ing in the moun­tains. When you think of a mine you think of one that is already many kilo­me­tres deep, and peo­ple work inside it. But some­times one has to start a new mine, so you start dig­ging the crust of the earth. And we had to find a good spot to start dig­ging. [Pre­fix]

While I’m not at all sure what that means, I can say “Happy Up Here”—the impres­sive CG video for the first sin­gle on Röyksopp’s third album, Junior—is directed by Reuben Suther­land, a design school dropout who has pre­vi­ously worked with The Doves, T-​​Mobile, and others.

Posted in Music | Comments closed

Picture Book

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I live in a neigh­bour­hood of brew­eries, rail-​​yards, and free­ways. I fall asleep to the sound of diesel-​​electric engines, and awake to the rum­ble of approach­ing jet­lin­ers. And I wouldn’t have it any other way.

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