HAL Vincent is a monoline script font, which exists in two states: filled and empty (outlined). Each character is a closed shape, composed of one continuous line drawing. The letter forms are inspired by a script font designed by naval scientist Dr. Allen Vincent Hershey. The Hershey fonts were a collection of early vector fonts released in Hershey’s report “Calligraphy for Computers” (1967).
Forward Online Festival 2022
We are excited to announce that the Forward Online Festival 2022 will take place in March again.
Slanted is offering one ticket for the Forward Online Festival. To take part in the lottery, please send an email with the subject “Forward Festival” to [email protected] until March 2nd, 2022, 11 a.m. (UTC+1). Legal ways are excluded. By taking part you are accepting the privacy statement of Slanted. Good Luck.
Forward Festival is a renowned conference for the local and international creative industries, established in 2015. The festival’s self declared mission is to serve as a platform for creative people and to promote inspiration and exchange. Protagonists from all disciplines of creativity are brought together in a program combining forums, workshops, exhibitions, talks, and side-events. Topics range from (graphic)design, typography, marketing, and branding to VR/AR, artificial intelligence, and architecture to photography, film, and TV.
Forward has made an impact internationally as an important platform for the industry at locations in the DACH region. From 2020 on, the focus has been on a hybrid event concept in order to make the program accessible to people across borders via livestream and interactive online formats.
The success formula of Forward is: It comes from within the industry and is authentic in its approach and content. The conference hits the right tone and sets key priorities as its initiators, such as Forward founder and curator Othmar Handl, themselves coming from the creative industries. Speakers follow this spirit and therefore contribute with personal stories about success and failure in the creative process, cooperation between the disciplines and their views of the creative industry. These ingredients add up to a wonderful, special atmosphere that cannot be experienced at any other creative festival.
After the smashing success of last year’s Forward online premiere with over 5,000 visits from 50+ countries, this year’s edition is extended to a 3-day virtual event from March 10th to 12th. Host Erik Kessels and speakers like photography-icon Oliviero Toscani, designers Paula Scher, and Mirko Borsche, Queen of Facefilters Johanna Jaskowska, 3D motion designers Eva Cremers and Alex Trochut, and many more want to bring back creativity in its most pure and ridiculous form. Join the Livestream on March 10 to 12th from wherever you are!
To really be creative, we need to feel comfortable and fearless inside our minds. The confidence and strength to be “ridiculously” creative needs to be regained during challenging times. “Creatives need to fight back now,” as Erik Kessels, host of Forward Online Festival, puts it. Founder & CEO of Forward, Othmar Handl, goes more than along with this opinion: “We want to show creativity in all its various forms. We have to move away from only presenting the seemingly perfect front of ourselves and our works and start to feel comfortable with showing the chaotic and raw processes in our metaphorical backyard.” This year Forward Festivals want to pull out all that hidden creativity and give creatives the confidence to take risks and cross borders again.
Forward Online Festival 2022
When?
March 10th to 12th, 2022
Where?
Online Festival
Tickets: Several ticket categories, Livestream from € 55.– / Workshops from € 85.–
Get your ticket now
Specials: Livestream, Video on demand, Q&As, digital Workshops, digital Networking
Type Distort Decay
Type Distort Decay is an experimental typeface workout where I try to work on a series of three
First is creating the design poster using the typefaces that I love.
“Distort” is when I try to break the design grid by randomly distorting the layout.
“Decay” is to repeatedly deconstruct everything until it generates a random pattern.
Depending on complexity, I may use it as a texture for the next exercise. In a way, my next poster always has a DNA of the previous layout.
Book Nooks
I custom made this typeface for a small two-player game called ‹Book Nooks›. In the game the characters need to solve puzzles revolving around word inventories. I wanted the letter forms to relate to each character’s abilities. The first character can conjure up objects through nouns in its inventory, so I assigned the uppercase letters to them and made them bulky and massive. The second character can manipulate in-game objects through adjectives in its inventory. To reflect this connecting, associative ability in the typeface I used geometric shaped sans letters in conjunction with high-contrast serifs for the lowercase alphabet.
Mono Moment
Monospaced fonts are fascinating! Mono Moment is aimed at type designers typographers and designers, but also at people who are dealing with type design for the first time. This publication thus becomes a reference book and source of inspiration!
Friedrich Nietzsche was probably one of the first to feel the aesthetic appeal of monospaced typefaces. Since he started writing with a typewriter, typefaces, and punctuation have been important to him. In the meantime, we encounter monospaced typefaces regularly in everyday life: in design and in art, in coding, on tax records, or on our ID. If you take a closer look, you will encounter non-proportional typefaces more often than expected.
Monospaced typefaces are defined by their fixed, equal width for all characters. Every character, letter, and number occupies horizontally and vertically the same space. Proportional typefaces, in turn, have harmoniously balanced spaces with variable widths between their characters. The widths are not set proportional. That is why monospaced typefaces are also named non-proportional. What exactly is the attraction of typefaces, whose letters and characters each occupy an equally large space?
Due to the increase in typeface production over the past few decades, almost every well-developed font family also has a mono or semi-mono cut. When searching for the word “monospace” on the World Wide Web, countless entries can be found in addition to the results such as “I am looking for a beautiful monospaced font,” “Top Ten Monospace Fonts,” or “Best Monospace Fonts for Coding.” At a time when it has never been easier to design and publish typefaces, this book provides a good orientation to monospace!
Featured typefaces in Mono Moment: Airport Mono, Andal Mono, Anonymus Pro, AO Mono, Aperçu Mono, Atlas Typewriter, Base Mono, Basier Mono, Blue Mono, Calico Mono, Cindie D, Consolas, Courier, Cygnito Mono, Eureka Mono, GT Pressura Mono, IBM Plex Mono, Input Mono, Kettler, Letter Gothic, LTC Remington, Maison Mono, Monaco, Monoela, MonoLisa, Orator, Pica 10 Pitch, Pitch, Plastic, Platelet, Roboto Mono, Simon Mono Light, Sneak Mono, Source Code Pro, Space Mono, Splendid 66, Sudo, Suisse Int’l Mono, SYNO MONO, The Future Mono, TheSans Mono, Typist Code, Typist Slab, Ubuntu Mono, and Vulf Mono.
Mono Moment–Monospace Type Design
Publisher: Slanted Publishers
Design: Christina Wunderlich
Release: February, 2022
Volume: 208 pages
Format: 15.5 × 24.5 cm
Language: English
Typefaces: Droulers, Monument Grotesk Regular / Italic, Monument Grotesk Mono, Monument Grotesk Semi-Mono
Workmanship: Softcover, digital print, colored spiral binding
Paper Cover: EXTRASMOOTH White 350 g/qm, Metapaper
Paper Inside: SMOOTH White 120 g/qm, Metapaper
Printing: Der Gilch
ISBN: 978-3-948440-32-9
Price: € 22.–
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ADHDADHDADHD
Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a mental health disorder that can cause above-normal levels of hyperactive and impulsive behaviors. People with ADHD may also have trouble focusing their attention on a single task or sitting still for long periods of time. Both adults and children can have ADHD.
This poster seeks to communicate the feeling of having ADHD through clashing, complementary colors, and repetitions of the acronym ADHD. The visual disorientation of the poster mimics the loss of control that many sufferers of this condition feel.
we are now at our cruising altitude
A poster promoting the 30th anniversary of the Moscow Golden Bee Global Biennale of Graphic Design. The typographic texture, metallic palette, and layered visuals pay homage to the experimental voice of the Golden Bee.
HV_100 / 12
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
HV_100 / 11
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
HV_100 / 10
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
HV_100 / 9
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
HV_100 / 8
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
HV_100 / 7
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
HV_100 / 6
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
HV_100 / 5
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
HV_100 / 4
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
HV_100 / 3
Dora Balla is a graphic designer and university professor at the MOME, member of the AGI. As a designer she focuses on personal and experimental methods in typography, type design and editorial design. She has been working on a research project since a decade, based on finding the relationship between visual research and contemporary graphic design history, primarily Hungarian cultural heritage.
HV_100 / 2
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
HV_100 / 1
This experimental typeface was inspired by the work of Vilmos Huszar, more specifically, by the cover of the De Stijl magazine designed by him in 1917, and the unique font he made for the de stijl logo. This work enhances the design of the original typeface, while it is also a stylistic and graphic innovation. The sample sheets of font-experiments became distinctive images, compact shapes by the use of patterns and grids that do not modify the basic shape of the fonts. It is, in every case, a peculiar and universal pattern system that reshape the original design.
Happy New Fear
Because there is always a new fear to add every new year 🙂
Expect.W.
Expect.W.
2GH.
2GH.
Moments of truth.
Moments.
A visual interpretation of the iconic Gang Starr – Moments of truth song.
Classike
Get to know the Art Déco inspired typeface Classike by Emtype Foundry which adds an exclusive touch to your design.
Classike is a high contrast squarish display typeface. Inspired by the Art Déco period from a modern perspective. Refined and elegant yet with a mechanical vibe, it is ideal for pairing with any functional font, it works especially well with Geogrotesque, from which it inherited its proportions and soul. Classike adds an exclusive touch and helps enrich your graphic voice.
The typeface is inspired by the Art Déco period and street signs typography. While traveling, designer Eduardo Manso noticed that many signs combine squarish sans typefaces with high contrast styles of the same typeface. Those typefaces, sometimes lettering, thanks to the contrast, were more elegant and refined but had the same structure and conceptual essence as the squarish sans.
Classike inherits the proportions of Geogrotesque Sharp. The designer decided it was a solid starting point to create a high contrast sans. In the beginning he did several proofs to see how far he could push the contrast, but finally opted for a moderate solution to make it usable in a wider range of situations. Despite this, it still looks luxurious and elegant.
Apart from the high contrast that adds most of the charm, there are less visible details like the middle bar that has been aligned in several letters such as, B, E, F, G, K, and H and the numbers 3 and 8. It is reminiscent of the hand painted street signs, where the letter artist would use only a few alignment lines for all letters. These regular proportions emphasized the Art Déco look of the family.
Classike comes with just two alternates, M and R. Not a lot, evidently, but just enough to expand possibilities without deviating from the concept.
Pairing with Geogrotesque is obviously easy due to its origin, but also with any functional sans. The family include a Variable Font that adds all the advantages of the format (All in one file, low size, custom styles, etc). Although Variable Fonts are not fully established in the market yet, it is ready and waiting for that moment.
Classike
Design: Eduardo Manso
Foundry: Emtype Foundry
Release: October 2021
Styles and Weights: UltraLight, UltraLight Italic, Light, Light Italic, Regular, Regular Italic, Medium, Medium Italic, SemiBold, SemiBold Italic, Bold, and Bold Italic
File Formats: woff, woff2, otf, ttf, eot + Trial fonts
Price Single Style: from € 45.–
Price Whole Family: € 299.–
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