#agencyfb
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Note
hii!! if it’s okay can you share where you found the fonts for your Minxie poster?? I love her btw!! If you don’t mind me asking, where did she learn to do magic?? hope you have a lovely day lovely <33
Hey! I would, of course, be more than happy to share where I downloaded the font used for the poster... if I remembered where I had gotten it.
The font was one I had already downloaded and installed onto my computer but idk if it's one from a resource pack or one I found and downloaded from dafont.com myself. Before I went hunting for a font that matched the one used for the real character posters, I thought it would be a good idea to check through the ones I already had, and the one I settled on matched the best. The best I can do is tell you what the font is called and hope that you can find the right one. In any case, it's called and the font I used is AgencyFB and the font settings I used for the dimensions of Minxie's poster is 325pt with the height at 10 pt, set to metrics with the spacing between letters at -10. I hope this helps, and I'm sorry I couldn't link you to where I originally found the link myself but dafont would be a good place to start looking.
Aa for your Minxie questions, she hasn't actually had anyone to teach her magic. It in her blood, from her mother who is a widely admired and feared sea witch. Unfortunately Minxie was raised by her very human father and doesn't really remember her mother. She realized that she could use magic when she was very young and everything that she can do is a result of trial and error and her teaching herself. Unfortunately, Minxie has a whole lot to learn. Her most reliable magical ability is her talent of turning herself into a cat.
Hope you have a good day too, and I hope this helped. If you have any other questions, I'm happy to answer them!
1 note
·
View note
Text
GoodGirl
Logo w dwóch wersjach:
Ciężkiej typowo militarnej stworzonej w Adobe Illustrator CS6
Czcionki: Brich, AgencyFB
Oraz lżejszej, powstałej przy użyciu narzędzi canva.com
1 note
·
View note
Photo
Fun with Fonts: Agency FB
0 notes
Note
Hi there. I am not sure if you saw my reply post to your question. The font is AgencyFB Black for the Mandalorian logo. Enjoy!
Ahhhh sorry. Im at work. Thanks tho. Thanks for reaching out :))))
1 note
·
View note
Text
pearlwingdraws replied to your video “I have found the font used for The Mandalorian logo and made this.”
WHATS THE FONT
The font is AgencyFB Black
1 note
·
View note
Photo
Thank you so so much to everybody who helped me reach 10,000 followers. I figured now would be a good opportunity to share some more of the text psds that I’ve made that I’m proud of.
Depending on how you end up using these you may find that changing the size causes the effects to look very different, so feel free to tweak as you need to.
Please like/reblog if you take or use and feel free to tag me (#userrobin) in whatever you’ve made! Please don’t pass off or share as your own.
Download Here
IMPORTANT NOTE: The PSDs contain all of the text and layer effects used for the titles but the fonts in the PSD are (ugly) standard placeholder fonts and not the fonts that I used themselves because they are not mine to share. So you can find the links to the fonts that I used for each below as well as in the folder
Feel free to send me an ask with any questions or concerns
Thor: Ragnarok: https://www.dafont.com/modi-thorson.font
Pacific Rim: https://fontzone.net/font-details/agencyfb-bold
Annihilation: https://www.fontspring.com/fonts/horizon-type/acherus-grotesque
The Greatest Showman: http://www.fontspace.com/fz/the-greatest-font
High School Musical: https://www.dafontfree.net/freefonts-helvetica-neue-lt-std-f61058.htm
Sky High: https://www.ffonts.net/KING-SANS-Regular.font and http://www.fontpalace.com/font-download/BankGothic+Bold/
Dunkirk: http://fontsgeek.com/fonts/Berthold-Akzidenz-Grotesk-Bold
The Great Gatsby: http://www.fontpalace.com/font-details/Atlas+Solid/
Beauty and the Beast: https://www.ffonts.net/Lightfoot.font.download (uppercase letters) and https://www.fontsquirrel.com/fonts/eb-garamond
127 notes
·
View notes
Note
Could you tell us about how you do your art?
Okay, whoa holy shit, I gotta answer this don’t I? This is gonna get long so I’ll put it under the cut. Sorry, it’s a lot of reading:
So, there are two ways I do my art. First: Traditional sketch w/ digital coloring. You’ve probably seen my uncolored doodle pages, which are just scans of pages from my sketchbook, nothing special. When I color them, I open them up in photoshop and, after putting down a white background underneath everything, I use this handy-dandy lil trick called Multiply:
This allows me to color underneath the drawing layer, which ends up looking like this:
Very simple. Now, onto digital stuff.
For this, I’m going to use the fanart I made for a Mad Max: Fury Road fanfiction called Unlikely, because it’s a good example of a full blown illustration from start to finish. Brace yourself for a lot of photoshop terminology that I am not going to explain because there’s no time.
Step One: The Thumbnail
This is the initial sketch of what I wanted the piece to look like. It was very small, but once I was satisfied with it, I resized it to fill the entire canvas and lowered the opacity to about 30%. I didn’t spend too much time on this, I got the basics down and that’s it. Thumbnails aren’t supposed to be pretty, they’re supposed to illustrate the bare minimum of what you want to achieve. Every proper illustration I make starts with this step.
Step Two: The Sketch
This is drawn on a separate layer above the thumbnail, and you can juuuust barely see the thumbnail underneath. For both the thumbnail and the sketch I like to use a mid-tone gray because it mimics a 2H pencil which I use for sketching on actual paper. During this step I can take the time to adjust the size of certain elements (I made Slit smaller, for example, and played around with head size and positioning), and make the composition nicer than in my thumbnail. In my sketch I also try to include as many details as I can, to make the line art easier on myself.
Step 3: Line Art
Line art is always tricky, but thanks to my detailed sketch I can get the line art down quickly. Again, I lowered the sketch layer’s opacity down to about 30%. For crisp, sharp lines I use full opacity and a round brush. For this step I use pure black because I want the lines to show up nice and clear, and I kept the size of the brush around 5 px as the smallest, 6 px as the average, and 7-8 px at the largest, to keep the line art consistent.
Step Four: Flat Colors
Here’s where things are gonna get pretty touch and go, these steps aren’t very well documented and I employ a method I lovingly refer to as “100 Layers McGee”, because I use a buttload of layers. During this step I carefully fill in the basic color for each individual item in the drawing. So: skin gets a layer, clothing gets a layer, bandages get a layer etc. If two items aren’t touching each other, they can be on the same layer, but if they are touching they are put on separate layers. I call this the “Can’t Touch This” method.
This can add up to a lot of layers. Don’t ask me how I keep track of all those layers, the answer is: I don’t. If I step away from a drawing for more than two days I will forget which layer certain things are on and will spend a little while looking for that thing by turning off each layer one-by-one. Yes, sometimes I don’t find which layer the thing is on until much later. Yes, I am okay with this. This is what works for me. I am willing to suffer if it makes other things easier.
The reason I do this is because it makes the shading process much easier using this trick:
Step Five: Shading
See this button? I love this button. When I click this button all empty pixels in the selected layer become “locked”, meaning that I can only color on the parts of the layer that already have color. It is a godsend. This is the same technique I use to color my traditional sketches btw, in addition to the “100 Layers McGee” and “Can’t Touch This” techniques.
During this step of the process I keep a very close eye on the color panel when selecting my colors, and I use the eyedropper tool on previous drawings of certain characters in order to ensure that I get the correct shade/hue/saturation for specific elements to avoid making things too light or too dark. I will also reference other things like screenshots from the source material, or pictures from a comic page which has a similar color palette or lighting to the illustration I am currently making. I will later adjust the color of the characters according to the lighting I choose for the scene (this scene was lit by firelight, so I made the character’s skin slightly warmer and highlighted it with yellow/orange. I also used a similar color to highlight everything else in the image).
Now, usually I have other elements like the background/clothing etc. filled in while I’m doing the shading so I know how everything looks next to each other but I don’t have a very good example of how that looks. But anyway, this is what the “skin” layer looks like with the proper shadows and highlights.
Sometimes I use clipping masks as well. I used clipping masks on the background in order to separate the cool shadows and the warm highlights, but that was just me being cautious because I was worried about fucking up something. That step looks something like this:
The coloring and shading steps require a bit of know-how regarding color theory, composition, contrast etc. basically a lot of planning and a lot of thinking. Practice is the key folks. Practice is always the key.
Step Six: Etc…
During this step I take the time to add my tumblr url and any additional credits/captions etc. I try to use fonts that are thematically appropriate.
For most of my Mad Max fanart I use AgencyFB Regular, the font used for “Mad Max” in the Mad Max: Fury Road titles. This time I used a font called Road Rage Regular because it looked awesome, and for the dialogue I used a font called Act of Rejection Regular, because it looked awesome and fit the mood I wanted to convey. Never underestimate the power of a well chosen font (and keep in mind it should be reasonably legible).
This is also the step in which I added the speech bubbles as well. Sometimes I might add a paper texture on top of everything with a multiply layer, however using this will slightly darken the overall image so I don’t do it often, but I did do it for this piece, though I had to make the speech bubbles lighter.
Step Seven: Sit Back and Stare at the Finished Product for 3 Hours
So satisfying.
7 notes
·
View notes
Photo
What do you call when two macs are mad at each other? #madmax #GraphicDesign #Typography #Art #Vector #Illustration #furyroad #agencyfb #mac #mad #anger
1 note
·
View note
Text
sargesbestgirl replied to your video “I have found the font used for The Mandalorian logo and made this.”
WhAT iS The FoNT??
AgencyFB Black
1 note
·
View note