Headline Heads Up — No. 21

October 16, 2013 at 11:04 am

One Tues­day every month, I’m going to round up a cou­ple (maybe a few) awe­some dis­play type­faces to show­case and give a lit­tle break­down on each one. If you have a sug­ges­tion you want me to take a look at, drop me a line. Let’s jump straight into some head­line goodness.

 

Brand

Foundry : Lián Types
Designer(s) : Maximiliano Sproviero
Cost: $37

Brand Typeface by Maximiliano Sproviero - Soft Chancery Cursive Script Example

It’s no mis­take the sam­ple above is all about food; Brand is the per­fect pack­ag­ing script for tasty morsels. It has vari­ety with OpenType lig­a­tures and alter­nates to help it grab atten­tion, but leg­i­bil­i­ty and read­abil­i­ty remain high when glanc­ing on a store shelf or adver­tise­ment. There are also inline and shad­ed ver­sions that would work great for warm, invit­ing invitations.

 

Braxton

Foundry : Fontfabric
Designer(s) : Evgeny Tkhorzhevsky
Cost: $95

Braxton Typeface by Evgeny Tkhorzhevsky Alphabet Example - Pointed calligraphic upright script

On the other end of the script spec­trum is the point­ed, cal­li­graph­ic Braxton by Evgeny Tkhorzhevsky. Available in five weights, the delib­er­ate style of the strokes give the let­ters strength. However, the rep­e­ti­tion of the angle and ver­ti­cal stroke weight destroy read­abil­i­ty in any kind of longer sen­tence set­ting. With a few extra lig­a­tures and styl­is­tic alter­nates, Braxton would work well in pack­ag­ing or an iden­ti­ty system.

 

Levi Rebrushed

Foundry : Levi Szekeres
Designer(s) : Levi Szekeres
Cost: FREE for personal use

Levi Rebrushed by Levi Szekeres Alphabet Example - Rough, raw brush design font

Similar to Braxton, Levi Rebrushed is built on very delib­er­ate strokes. The rough, painter style isn’t for every project, but for the right grunge, punk, or edgy poster it is per­fect. You will also need to check that you have all the glyphs you need as this is far from a pro­fes­sion­al font with full lan­guage support.

 

Brush Up

Foundry : Pintassilgo Prints
Designer(s) : Ricardo Marcin, Erica Jung
Cost: $24

Brush Up Typeface by Pintassilgo Prints Alphabet Example - Hand painted brushed font with alternate characters

Sticking with brush style type­faces, next is Brush Up by the duo at Pintassilgo Prints. This hand-painted type con­tains three vari­a­tions of each let­ter, two vari­a­tions of numer­als, a cou­ple of extra punc­tu­a­tion glyphs, and even a few squig­gles. Its style floats between grunge, hip­ster, and play­ful depend­ing on how it is paired with imagery and even its color. That makes it a very ver­sa­tile tool when need­ing a hand made touch.

 

Sketchnote

Foundry : Delve Fonts
Designer(s) : Mike Rohde
Cost: $99

Sketchnote Typeface by Mike Rohde Alphabet Example - Hand drawn type

We’re stick­ing with hand made for the last three type­faces on this mon­th’s round up. First up is Sketchnote from Mike Rohde. Mike is the guy behind the whole sketch­note idea and he even wrote a book about it. When he need­ed a hand-drawn type­face to set his book, he cap­tured scans of his own hand­writ­ing and dig­i­tized them. The edges keep the slight­ly rough tex­ture of ink on paper while the strokes show the slight vari­a­tion of the human hand as it moves across a page. Great ideas and a great typeface.

 

Charmante

Foundry : Juraj Chrastina
Designer(s) : Juraj Chrastina
Cost: $59

Charmante Typeface by Juraj Chrastina Alphabet Example - Charming handwritten font

The sec­ond hand-drawn type­face on this mon­th’s list is Charmante. It’s elon­gat­ed pro­por­tions give it a ton more char­ac­ter and quirk. Shown above for K‑S the bold style adds even more inter­est­ing fea­tures by uneven­ly increas­ing only cer­tain stroke weights. All of it com­bines to make a charm­ing, casu­al font for invi­ta­tions, greet­ings, and cof­fee shop menus.

 

Lango Px

Foundry : Pixilate
Designer(s) : Kemie Guaida
Cost: $24

Lango Typeface by Kemie Guaida Alphabet Example - Fun, playful handwritten font

Last up this is month is Lango Px. This hand-drawn type­face is avail­able in four weights; it has tons of bounce and play­ful­ness in its tall, lean let­ters. Its casu­al and dare I say an excel­lent replace­ment for when a client demands Comic Sans on a project. Lango Px would also be per­fect for baby announce­ments, chil­dren’s birth­day cards, and other juve­nile pieces. Pixilate also has sev­er­al other hand­writ­ing style fonts worth check­ing out.

 

Headline Heads Up — No. 15

July 10, 2012 at 7:55 am

One Tues­day every month, I’m going to round up a cou­ple (maybe a few) awe­some dis­play type­faces to show­case and give a lit­tle break­down on each one. If you have a sug­ges­tion you want me to take a look at, drop me a line. Let’s jump straight into some head­line goodness.

47

Foundry : Moinzek
Designer(s) : Hendrick Rolandez
Cost: FREE

47 Typeface by Hendrick Rolandez - Art Deco Font, Stylish Sans Serif

First up is an Art Deco treat. Named 47, I like it for the num­bers. They would look great cast in metal and hang­ing on a house for the street address. I could also see using the glyphs as the base for a logo and build­ing on their shapes. It’s all upper­case and num­bers at the moment, but there is also an ital­ic that adds a lit­tle for­ward move­ment. It would look good on the side of a car for a name­plate or some­thing. Get 47 on Dribbble, and check out some exam­ples on Behance.

Continue read­ing

A Spare Update — No. 3

December 15, 2011 at 11:07 pm

With the way the hol­i­days are soak­ing up all my time, I’m going to wrap up this month’s Wall­pa­per Wednes­day and Head­line Heads-Up into one big update post. But first, here’s some other cool things to go check out.

Portfolio Site for Sean Wes
Some great let­ter­ing and all around good type & design.

Print Free Graph Paper
Need a A4 sheet of 1/4″ iso­met­ric graph paper? Print one here along with nor­mal boxed graph paper and other formats.

Portfolio Site for Anthony James Paglia
All around fun design and some nice type projects. (Plus I love the color.)

Icon Fonts are Awesome
A cool CSS trick with icon fonts.

Continue read­ing