These people really care about fonts

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, April 30, 2024


These people really care about fonts
At TypeThursday, a regular mixer brings together designers and typography nerds who get consumed by spacing and serifs. Lauryn Stallings/The New York Times.

by Fabrice Robinet



NEW YORK (NYT NEWS SERVICE ).- At TypeThursday, a monthly meetup in several cities, including Los Angeles, London and Bucharest, Romania, font designers critique one another’s letterforms over wine. They hold forth about negative space, consistent strokes and serif experimentation. The group’s website bills the gathering as “three hours of fontastic fun.”

But when dozens of professionals congregate to talk about their craft, things can get heated.

“Are those C’s exactly the same?” asked Evan Sult, an art director in Brooklyn, during a TypeThursday event in December in New York. He was examining a designer’s sketches for a Cuban restaurant’s logo. “They don’t look exactly the same.”

“And why should they be?” said Paul Shaw, a type historian who lives in Manhattan.

“Hey, hey, hey! Don’t make me ask the volunteers to get physical,” Mirko Velimirovic, 28, the event’s organizer, said jokingly.

Typefaces are everywhere. The New York City subway communicates mostly in Helvetica. The lifestyle companies advertising in its cars may use another modern sans-serif font or, increasingly, something more retro. Many large tech companies have designed or commissioned their own house styles, including Netflix Sans, Airbnb Cereal, PayPal Sans, Uber Move and Google’s Product Sans.

Matthew Rechs, a business coach for type designers, whose arms are covered in ampersand tattoos, argued that a font could be a brand’s most potent signifier. For example, “if you try to imagine a bottle of Jack Daniel’s, or really any bottle, without the type on it, you’re left with very little to differentiate it,” he said.

And it’s not just products. Political campaigns may be remembered or forgotten by their choices of fonts. Many of the 2020 Democratic candidates have picked Gotham-like typefaces, which could be a nod to the geometric font used by Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign.

Some were more daring. Before she dropped out of the race, Sen. Kamala Harris had run her campaign in Bureau Grotesque or a font very close to it, according to Matthew Butterick, a type designer.

“It’s a little strange and funky looking, and it was used well by the campaign to set her apart,” Butterick said in a phone interview.

Though their fonts may be widely recognizable, the designers themselves tend not to be. TypeThursday, which began in 2015 at a Brooklyn bar and has expanded to eight cities around the world, is a place to put a face to a typeface. And to vent. Because even in the digital age, making fonts is time-consuming, human labor.

“Typography passes for being invisible,” said Jonathan Hoefler, 49, a star designer who has created typefaces for Apple and the 2012 Obama campaign. “People really don’t think about the fact that typefaces are indeed made by people.”

Juan Villanueva, 31, a designer at Monotype, one of the world’s largest type foundries — as they became known when typefaces were forged out of metal — said it took him anywhere from a month to a couple of years to create a full digital alphabet, beginning with sketching letters in his notebook.

“It’s our job to find subtle differences between each design and see what works specifically for one client or brand,” he said. One of his first tasks at Monotype was to create the Bitcoin symbol for Noto, a Google initiative to create a font family that supports every language.

A lot of Villanueva’s work involves drawing the same letters over and over at his desk, obsessing about kerning, the squeezing of space between characters.

“It only feels isolating afterward, when you realize you haven’t talked to people for five hours,” he said.

TypeThursday, Velimirovic said, is both a needed social reprieve and an opportunity for designers to get positive feedback from their peers. That second part is crucial, he said, because typography tends to be an individualist and hypercritical field in which peers regularly try to outwit one another. At TypeThursday, he has made a point to discourage such behavior and foster, instead, a culture of constructive criticism.

“It’s a place where you can go and know that people aren’t going to walk all over you,” said Velimirovic, who got his first big contracts through friends he had met at the event, eventually taking the reins of the New York monthly meetup. It now takes place in the offices of the Type Directors Club, a nonprofit that promotes education in type.

Harrison Jude, a graphic designer who attended the event in Manhattan in December, said TypeThursday helped him connect with fellow type lovers whom he would not have otherwise met. At his first meeting, in 2018, a presenter was called out by someone in the audience for a minor typo in his PowerPoint presentation.

“There was just glorious cheering,” Jude said. “I was like, ‘Oh, yep, these are my people.’ ”

© 2020 The New York Times Company










Today's News

January 31, 2020

Ten sculptures by Dali nabbed in Stockholm break in

Another clue for a CIA sculpture that holds a decades-old mystery

Major donation of $1 million for new education fund announced by the Boca Raton Museum of Art

The Super Bowl is the biggest art show in Miami right now

kaufmann repetto now represents the work of Corita Kent

LiveAuctioneers reports record-setting year with 31% growth in online sales, 76% more traffic than competitors

Hindman ends 2019 with 11 auction records and unprecedented growth

Kunsthaus Zürich presents masterpieces of Italian drawing

Bonhams launches a new Post-War & Contemporary art sale in Los Angeles on February 15

Portrait of Pauline Bonaparte by Marie-Victoire Lemoine highlights Doyle's February 5 auction

Everard Auctions announces Fine and Decorative Arts Sale now open for bidding on iGavelauctions.com

Pace presents more than seventy new works by Lucas Samaras

Guggenheim Museum appoints Cyra Levenson and Gail Engelberg to new positions

Pérez Art Museum Miami announces new senior appointments & changes to museum staff

These people really care about fonts

Franz Mazura, opera singer who relished villains, dies at 95

Moss Arts Center opens a suite of exhibitions by women artists

Sotheby's Masters Week kicks off with record-setting sales for Tiepolo, Mantegna & more

Two new Catalan Modernist paintings join the Meadows Museum's collection

Toledo Museum of Art names Adam M. Levine as 10th director of the Museum

Metro Pictures opens an exhibition of works by John Miller

$50 million exhibit of rare, early American gold in Long Beach, Feb. 20-22

Susanin's online-only collections auction will feature nearly 600 quality lots in a host of categories

Jane Austen first editions lead Fine Books & Manuscripts at Swann

How Technology Has Changed Gaming




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful