digital phenomenon 0

Quick Guide To Typography: Learn And Be Inspired 04/21/11

So you want to learn typography. You’re in good company! Typophile culture is booming on the Internet. The font revolution is a digital phenomenon, and its players all converge on ...


So you want to learn typography. You’re in good company! Typophile culture is booming on the Internet. The font revolution is a digital phenomenon, and its players all converge on the web.

digital phenomenon

digital phenomenon

Start Here (And Stop Back Frequently)

When you’re just getting your feet wet in the sea of type, these sites will act as your water wings:

Myfonts

One of the biggest typeface sites on the Internet, Myfonts curates an unparalleled catalog of well-organized fonts. New font designers will also love MyFonts’ email newsletter, including the stellar Creative Characters interview with talented font designers.

Myfonts

Myfonts

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Counterspace

This elegant site provides a classical foundation in typeface, from letter anatomy to type history.

Counterspace

Counterspace

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Thinking With Type

The web companion to Ellen Lupton’s seminal book on typography as a design feature, this website has a high density of useful information about the history, present, and future of type. Thinking with Type is a must-see for the self-educated scholar of typography.

Thinking With Type

Thinking With Type

Making Your First Fonts

The day you decide to try your hand at font design is an exciting turning point in your foray into typography. To make your fonts shine, you’ll want a more technical primer to guide you. Use these two references to help you build fonts that work.

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Typeworkshop.Com

The site at-large is a fascinating look at creative type design, but the basics section is an indispensable crash course into some of the geometric decisions you’ll make as you craft a typeface.

Typeworkshop

Typeworkshop

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Elements Of Typographic Style Applied To The Web

This site is a web companion to the book Elements of Typographic Style. Appropriately enough, it contains supplemental information specifically intended for typefaces optimized for web use.

Elements

Elements

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More Great Typography Sites

I Love Typography

This excellent site has its finger on the pulse of the type community. In addition to useful discussions of type and font faces, I Love Typography reports on type culture and tools. For some friendly competition, try their type identification game!

I Love Typography

I Love Typography

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Typographica

To see fonts through the experts’ eyes, try Typographica. The educational reviews will train you to look critically at your own work.

Typographica

Typographica

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Cavendish Gallery Of Print And Typography

To move forward, sometimes it helps to look backward. The Cavendish Gallery is an online museum of historical typefaces. It’s also an excellent place to test your own burgeoning ability to critique typefaces. What makes old typefaces appropriate for their own time? What combination of practicality and public opinion caused the type of yore to evolve into the fonts of today?

Cavendish Gallery

Cavendish Gallery

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Typophile

Typophile is possibly the Internet’s greatest hub of font enthusiasts. Go there to sit at the knees of the greats, get help with your own work, watch expert font identification and critique, and shoot the breeze with others about your shared love of type.

Typophile

Typophile

Understanding Terminology And History

If you want to go in-depth and do some homework, bookmark and go through these articles talking about the history and background of typography:

Terminology

Terminology

Typography Videos – Be Inspired!

Want to see typography in action? Get inspired with these 5 killer examples in motion!

Pulp Fiction Typography

Wonderful typographic interpretation of a very well know scene from the film Pulp Fiction, probably NSFW.

A Lesson On Typography

Typography history visualized and put in motion – nice!

Minimalism – Kinetic Typography Poem

Minimalism explained with help of kinetic typography:

How To Impress A Woman

Requiem For A Dream

The “You’re on uppers” scene in REQUIEM FOR A DREAM portrayed using nothing but kinetic typography.

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