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Test Post from 365typo
Test Post from 365typo https://www.365typo.com
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Gerard Unger Scholarship 2020
TypeTogether announced the 6th edition of Gerard Unger Scholarship, open to any current or graduated student who has developed a typeface in a type design course within the past two years (2018–2020).
The winning student will be given guidance and support in developing their career after graduation through critique, expert feedback, economic support, and a publishing contract with TypeTogether.
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Support Independent Type
Support Independent Type book is a compendium of contemporary, physical and digital type specimens. The carefully selected work of over 400 font labels and type designers gives you a glimpse into the adventurous shift of this creative industry.
Back the project at Kickstarter and emerge yourself in a world of boundlessness creativity and change in typography along the way!
Editors: Lars Harmsen, Marian Misiak Binding: softcover, thread stitching, wrapped poster – dust jacket Volume: ≈ 320 pages Format: 21 × 27 cm Printing: full colour offset + back and white insert Paper: Munken Print White 115g, Creamy Hibulk 53g Language: English
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Now you can support “K. H. Drescher – Berlin Typo Posters” book
This publication serves as a review of the extraordinary life of a theatre graphic designer but also as an inspiration for the here and now. Support the edition of the book at Kickstarter by 11 October 2019.
K.H. Drescher—Berlin Typo Posters, Texts, and Interviews A Publication about the Designer of the Berliner Ensemble Karl-Heinz Drescher (1937–2011)
Published by: Slanted Publishers and Markus Lange
Concept and Design: Markus Lange
Release: February 2020
Format: 195 × 265 mm
Volume: 272 pages
Language: German + English
Printing: Offset
Edition: 1,000
ISBN: 978-3-948440-00-8
With typographic posters of Karl-Heinz Drescher and texts by Dr. Friedrich Diekmann, Dr. Sylke Wunderlich, Helmut Brade, Niklaus Troxler, Gerd Fleischmann, Jamie Murphy, Erik Spiekermann, Ferdinand Ulrich, Götz Gramlich, Peter Kammerer, Vera Tenschert, Cesarina Drescher, and Alessandro Drescher.
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The world’s writing systems
The worldswritingsystems.org web site presents one glyph for each of the world’s writing systems.
It is the first step of the Missing Scripts Project, a long-term initiative that aims to identify writing systems which are not yet encoded in the Unicode standard. As of today, there are still 146 scripts not yet encoded in Unicode.
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Mouvo Festival 2019 review
In February, the 4th year of the Mouvo festival, organised by the Prague multi-discipline studio Oficina, took place in the Prague Archa theatre.
The event primarily focuses on graphic design, motion design and animation, but also overlaps into other spheres of human creativity.
For me, the star of the festival was Turkish guru Memo Akten, who started off the first day’s presentations. Memo comes from Istanbul and describes himself as an “artist, researcher and philomath, working with computation as medium, inspired by the intersections of science and spirituality; and collisions between nature, science, technology, ethics, ritual, tradition and religion”. The linking elements between projects bordering art and science, presented by Memo in Prague, are artificial intelligence and machine learning.
During his presentation, Memo mentioned 19th century mechanical computers, not least because of a remarkable woman, Ada Lovelace, a mathematician and the first female programmer, who from her 17 years of age co-operated with Charles Babbage, the inventor of programmable counting machines. Lovelace had in her musings predicted that machines would be capable of creating – music, for example – if we provide them with enough inputs.
It is this parameter-based generation that Memo Akten focuses on in his projects. Be it generating random pictures which look exactly like deep space photos from the Hubble Space Telescope, or a robot’s answers to fundamental questions pertaining to mankind’s society. Memo’s robot first becomes acquainted with relationships between certain words, for example man-king, woman-queen; then learns to find similar relationships in large numbers of data. The results can be surprising. Try it yourself, with this simple quiz: man-doctor, woman-______. If you’re interested in knowing what Memo’s robot answered, have a look at Twitter accounts @wordofmath or @wordofmathbias; links to other projects or to recordings of selected talks can be found at Memo’s website www.memo.tv.
Another thing I found interesting at the Mouvo conference was the presentation by Italian designer Frederica Fragapane. Frederica creates breathtakingly aesthetic compositions of graphs and schemes portraying large amounts of data. However, as one spectator succinctly commented in a discussion, aesthetics don’t always go hand-in-hand with legibility. Frederica’s infographics are therefore not easily understandable without careful study of the legend. Frederica also presented her project titled The Story Behind a Line, a visually attractive tale of six migrants to Europe. You’ll learn why they left their homes, how long they travelled, how they managed to negotiate thousand-kilometre distances, and what joys and hardships they encountered along the way. You’ll find all of the above at www.storiesbehindaline.com.
Other speakers this year were presenters of the Kurzgesagt studio, Illo, Ian Andersen of The Designers Republic, Ash Thorp, or Nidia Dias. A big thanks goes to all of them, but also to the organisers, who managed to bring to Prague so many interesting personalities and thus present many inpsiration-packed workshops and presentations to the audience.
Filip Blažek
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Preorder Slanted Magazine #33 – Prague
In the summer of 2018 the Slanted editors embarked on a trip to Prague to take a close-up look at the contemporary design scene there.
The list of designers Slanted met with boasts everyone from legends such as Rostislav Vaněk to well known figures from the contemporary design scene such as Briefcase Type Foundry, Anymade Studio, Studio Najbrt, and many more.
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Mouvo’s Fourth Edition will Offer an All-star Line-up and Workshops
Only few days remains until the fourth edition of Mouvo. It will be held from February 22 to 23 and will be hosted by Oficina, an award-winning Prague-based studio.
Mouvo’s Fourth Edition is Driven by Education
Prague and motion design. A connection that is becoming ever closer, primarily thanks to the Mouvo festival. The audience at the Archa Theatre will once again be treated to the very best of the global motion design scene. The speaker list includes Ash Thorp, Memo Akten, Ian Anderson (The Designers Republic), Federica Fragapane, Ilenia Notarangelo & Luca Gonnelli (Illo), Nidia Dias and Daniela Görzen & Miri Lee (Kurzgesagt). In addition, the event will see the launch of a new educational platform – Mouvo Lab.
The festival will newly feature the opportunity to take part in an extended workshop. Those interested in 3D software such as Houdini or Cinema 4D will welcome the opportunity to attend a workshop led by Helge Maus, the popular German author of books and tutorials known under the brand of Pixeltrain.
Ian Anderson will lead one of the two thematic limited-capacity workshops. His workshop will last one and a half days and will cover the key principles and the problem-solving process in graphic design. The participants of the closed creative workshop will be able to meet one of the greatest figures in the history of graphic design in person and will have the opportunity to refine their skills under the leadership of a star of global proportions.
As in previous years, the festival will combine talks by the world’s elite designers and an opportunity to network, mingle with the motion design community or have a small chat with the speakers. Friday’s talks will be followed by a VIP party for the holders of Mouvo Lovers’ tickets, and Saturday’s all-day programme will be topped off by an after-party.
For more information and the full line-up visit the festival’s website at www.mouvo.cz.
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TypeCon2019: Call for Programming
The Society of Typographic Aficionados is now accepting programming proposals for TypeCon2019 — taking place August 28th to September 1st in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
TypeCon covers an increasingly broad range of topics, including: typography; type design; font production; graphic design; digital media; printing history; calligraphy; lettering; book arts; advertising; wayfinding; type in motion; literacy; type sales and marketing; legal issues; design education; and other related areas.
We are currently seeking proposals for presentations, hands-on workshops, and other special events.
Submission Deadline
Friday, March 1st, 2019
More Information
Take a look at our proposal guidelines for all the details.
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Gerard Unger Scholarship for Young Type Designers
In memory of the late Dr Gerard Unger, renowned Dutch type designer and educator, and in celebration of what would have been Unger’s 77th birthday in January, TypeTogether font foundry has opened the call for entries for the Gerard Unger Scholarship, previously the TypeTogether Typeface Publishing Incentive Programme.
Unger Bio
Dr Gerard Unger (1942–2018) was a Dutch graphic and type designer, writer, and lecturer. He was Professor of Typography at Leiden University, The Netherlands, from which he also received his PhD in 2013. Until his death, Unger taught as visiting professor at University of Reading, UK, Department of Typography and Graphic Communication. Unger created many typefaces over the years, such as Coranto, Gulliver, Swift, and Vesta. He also designed stamps, coins, magazines, newspapers, books, logos, corporate identities, annual reports, and many other objects. His four final typeface families were developed and released with the independent font foundry TypeTogether. Dr Gerard Unger passed away in his home in Bussum, The Netherlands in late 2018.
Unger and TypeTogether
TypeTogether started the Typeface Publishing Incentive Programme in 2014 as an initiative to help promising typeface design students develop their careers. Dr Gerard Unger, who taught José Scaglione and Veronika Burian, the cofounders of TypeTogether, and inspired many more generations of young type designers, was an avid supporter of the Incentive Programme from the start. He had a lifelong interest in education that manifested in his various teaching engagements, his research, and the practical as much as theoretical texts and books he wrote. Unger had a keen eye and a meticulous sense for detail, mixed with much wit and a kind of cheekiness — all characteristics which shaped not only his work philosophy, but also his outlook on life in general, and which encouraged his students to do more and do better.
Dr Unger was full of anecdotes and curiosity for people, with each project exploring fresh ideas that could solve the design problems at hand. He would often sit with his students, chatting about life, travels, history, projects, and of course typography.
Scholarship Renaming
Several years prior to Unger’s death in 2018, TypeTogether began discussing with him how to honour him after his passing. “He was too kind a man to ever answer straight, so we have taken it upon ourselves,” said Burian and Scaglione. “We would like to honour Dr Gerard Unger as the mentor and teacher who always generously shared his knowledge, so we are proud to announce that we are renaming our Typeface Publishing Incentive Programme as the Gerard Unger Scholarship.”
Scholarship Purpose The annual Gerard Unger Scholarship will continue to offer guidance and support to at least one selected post-grad recipient, with the aim of enabling exceptional designs started during a course of study to be finalised and published commercially upon their course completion. The recipient receives mentoring to complete the project, a publishing contract, and funding to complete the project.
For details or to apply before 31 March 2019, visit this webpage.
Photo by Maurice Boyer
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Forward Vienna, festival for creativity, design and communication
The Forward festival will take place in Vienna, Austria, in Gartenbaukino from 4 to 6 April 2019.
Forward brings together the best international and local creative heads, who provide insights into their success stories in an exciting atmosphere. The conference, the centerpiece of the festival, is accompanied by various side events, such as workshops, live art sessions and networking events. Don’t miss out on exciting talks by David Carson or Anthony Burrill and many more.
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The 2019 European Design Awards call for entries
Design Awards is now officially open for entries. Designers from around Europe are invited to begin their submissions, which can be made before February 22, 2019.
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The call for proposals for ATypI Tokyo 2019 is up
Submit your fascinating, enriching and thought-provoking proposals you have in mind! Deadline for submissions has been extended to Thursday, February 10, 2019. More information at atypi2019.dryfta.com.
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For the beauty of writing
Fontsmith blog features an article about the right symbols in the right place: basics of orthotypography or how to use fonts to typeset texts beautifully.
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Slated launched a new responsive and bilingual website
The www.slanted.de website is online with a new structure and a new design in English and German language now.
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Kickstarter – a skeleton-based type design plugin for Glyphs
Draw letters with skeletons. Support Letterink, the most advanced brush tool for type design, lettering and calligraphy. Now on Kickstarter.
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Cultural Awareness in Type Design: Adelle Sans Devanagari by TypeTogether
TypeTogether – Veronika Burian and José Scaglione’s independent, cosmopolitan type foundry – has released its first Indic and Devanagari typeface, Adelle Sans Devanagari, a new member of the multi-award winning, multilingual Adelle Sans font family and a contribution to the cultural dialogue in the field of type design.
Rooted in the belief that broad language support is crucial to modern type design, Adelle Sans Devanagari is yet another push in TypeTogether’s ongoing multilingual efforts. Adelle Sans Devanagari translates the Latin’s forms into the voice of over 400 million people, or over 1/3 of all India, harmonising it with the rest of this versatile multiscript type family — now including Latin, Arabic, Armenian, Cyrillic, Greek, and now Devanagari with more scripts on the way.
The original Adelle Sans font family provides a more clean and spirited take on the traditional grotesque sans. In 2013 Veronika and José began a Devanagari project during a concentrated course at the University of Reading, UK. Erin McLaughlin and Vaibhav Singh continued consultancy and design a few years later, and the Adelle Sans Devanagari family came into its own when Pooja Saxena joined TypeTogether in 2017. In all, this family is the culmination of five years of sweating the details.
Adding language support is not a simple act of matching geometry stroke for stroke as it may seem from a distance. Each script must harmonise with the others while still maintaining its own identity. Devanagari script has more round shapes than Latin, with connected, arched, and flowing strokes. It also has deeper vertical metrics and a headline that makes drawing heavy weights a challenge. Adelle Sans Devanagari is therefore rounder and significantly more complex than its Latin counterpart. The Adelle family’s naturally clean and spirited shapes lend themselves to a graceful Devanagari translation of the Latin’s colour and feel, matching the overall functionality, purpose, and cultural awareness.
As is typical with TypeTogether typefaces, the most demanding editorial design problems were taken into consideration when creating Adelle Sans Devanagari: It is therefore available in seven weights that capitalise on legibility and provide the designer a wide range of text emphasis within their layout. By creating weights from Thin to Heavy, the Devanagari is a perfect counterpart to the Latin in tone, vertical proportions, and functionality.
The combination of lively character and unobtrusive appearance inherent to grotesque sans serifs make it an utterly versatile tool for every imaginable situation. Whether for branding, signage, editorial, or advertising, the keyword behind Adelle Sans Devanagari’s use is flexibility.
CREDITS
Concept: Veronika Burian & José Scaglione (Latin & Devanagari) Design: Veronika Burian (Latin & Devanagari), Erin McLaughlin (Devanagari), Pooja Saxena (Devanagari), José Scaglione (Latin & Devanagari), Vaibhav Singh (Devanagari) Engineering: Joancarles Casasín, Pooja Saxena Quality assurance: Azza Alameddine, Graphic design: Pooja Saxena, Elena Veguillas Copywriting: Joshua Farmer Consultancy on Devanagari: Fiona Ross, Vaibhav Singh
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