Typographic Design: Designing Fonts

Typographic Design: Designing Fonts explores the craft of creating type through the perspective of Blaze Type, the French type foundry known for expressive and high‑quality typefaces. The book highlights the educational and professional role of Blaze Type, showing how their typefaces, design philosophy, and teaching initiatives support both emerging and experienced designers.

The publication provides a comprehensive look at Blaze Type’s mission: liberating designers’ creativity with typefaces conceived as real working tools, combining technical precision with strong visual expression. It also addresses licensing, cultural context, and pedagogical aspects, demonstrating the foundry’s commitment to building a knowledgeable design community.

In May 2023, founder Matthieu Salvaggio launched learntype.eu, an online guide for beginners, students, and graphic designers who want to start in type design. This initiative addressed a gap—few accessible, up‑to‑date resources existed, and many quickly become outdated due to ongoing technical developments. Originally conceived as a prototype and laboratory for both content and form, the guide has since been redesigned and expanded into a print book published by French publisher Pyramyd. This new edition is tailored to support today’s designers in their type design journey.

The book itself reflects careful typographic thinking. Behind its understated cover, the object is thoughtfully designed with a soft binding and loose spine that lies flat on the desk, an index on the title page, and a refined two‑color layout that highlights essentials. The horizontal format places titles at the top and text in three clear columns below, guiding the eye and making reading continuous content comfortable without visual overload. Explanations throughout are concise, pragmatic, and supported by clear examples drawn from the Blaze Type catalog—reinforcing the book’s usefulness as a practical reference.

Content in the book is structured progressively into four main sections: Principles, Glyph Analyses, Particularities, and Appendices. The Principles section establishes fundamentals such as vocabulary, typeface anatomy, classifications, serif variations, and optical adjustments — relevant for both newcomers and seasoned practitioners. The Glyph Analyses section, considered the core of the book, breaks down the construction of capitals, lowercase letters, numerals, punctuation, and accent characters in a logical order. The method begins with simple forms like the capital “H”—a cornerstone for many related letters—then progresses to more complex shapes, reinforcing consistency and efficiency in designing a type family.

In the Particularities section, the book dives into noteworthy features of the new edition, including ligatures, stylistic details, and especially the treatment of italics—distinguishing between cursive, oblique, and slanted styles, and examining curves, anchor points, and serifs. Thirty‑two detailed entries unpack these subtleties that demand both a keen eye and technical mastery. The Appendices address often overlooked but essential topics, such as defining a creative brief, marketing a font, licensing models, and useful online resources—all critical for turning typeface design into a professional, distributed tool.

With its 324 accessible and clearly written pages, Salvaggio’s book stands as a contemporary reference for students, graphic designers, and enthusiasts seeking to understand typographic design. Its handy format, excellent readability, and thoughtful structure make it an ideal companion to consult during the design process. In conclusion, the author reminds readers that typography is a field where everyone remains a student for life—emphasizing that the learning journey never truly ends.

Typographic Design: Designing Fonts

Publisher: Blaze Type
Author: Matthieu Salvaggio
Design: Hic et Nunc studio

Release: 2025
Format: 16 × 24 cm
Volume: 324 pages
Language: English

ISBN: 978-2-35017-621-5
Price: €39.– (DE)

Buy here: pyramyd-editions.com

Found Calendar Letters

Ben reimagines the 2025 wall planner at the moment of its expiration. Once its functional job of tracking the year is finished, the discarded grid is given an unexpected second life through a process of visual rearrangement. By isolating specific dates across the now-defunct calendar, Ben reveals the word “DONE.” This work marks one final event for the year, celebrating the quiet satisfaction of completion and the transformation of a spent object into a typographic tool.

Unconditioned World

Unconditioned World is timeless and placeless. Nothing stands at the center, and no meaning remains at the edge. Freed from determinations, it begins nowhere and ends nowhere. Time collapses into continuity; space folds into relations and echoes. What connects us is not a shared language or territory, but our passage through languages and our intersections in space. Topology replaces geometry: the world is defined by shifting proximity, composed of difference, and always still becoming.

Making Time

Ben explores the cross over between temporal structure and letterform by deconstructing the standard monthly calendar. Through a process of subtraction and visual rearrangement, the functional grid of the year is transformed into a typographic tool. By isolating specific dates, Ben reveals the word “MAKE” within the passage of time. This work celebrates the constant, rhythmic nature of the creative process throughout the year

Residual Letterforms

Ben explores letterforms as the accidental byproduct of the printmaking process. These characters are formed by the residue of another action; the white of the font is the area being inked, while the black forms the background as ink bleeds over the edges. By defining the letter through what surrounds it rather than a solid stroke, Ben reveals a “negative” typography. This approach celebrates accident-driven processes and the intentional imprecision of the roller’s grain.

Action Cleaning Typeface

This experimental type is part of a project called Action Cleaning. The typeface is created on thermal paper using cleaning tools and alcohol-based products. It was made for the 14th anniversary of the International Day of Domestic Workers in 2024 as a provocation. The specimen shows scans of the typeface forming a text that explains the concept and demonstrates its readability. Each cleaning tool draws a glyph, shown in the example on the front where the coloured object was used to make the #3

Year

Each month of the year is approached as a character, discovered through unusual calligraphy tools and raw, unrestrained lines. In contrast to classical calligraphy, the work favors instinct, movement, and experimentation over elegance and control.

Art attack in progress

While searching for a phrase for an art notebook cover, the artist defined the purpose of the piece: to capture the moment when creativity strikes. The phrase “Art attack in progress” became that signal. A syringe was chosen as the writing tool to express urgency and intensity. After exploring multiple forms, the final lettering was debossed into leather, turning the notebook into a marker of active creation.

Digital Alchemy

This work is an attempt to melt, re-cast, and re-value typography, transforming concrete characters into a liquid substance. It seeks to discover new material forms, allowing language to be reconfigured beyond its conventional constraints.

GARDEN

A collaborative, hybrid installation combining textile and experimental typography. The work consists of a pixel-based embroidered surface made on wire mesh using reclaimed textile strips, combined with an aluminum typographic element. The layered system contrasts soft textile surfaces with rigid industrial materials, while blue backlighting enhances depth and visibility at night.

Arabic Typography Experimentation

A curated collective of expressive posters that explore the emotional depth of Arabic typography. Each piece is a visual experiment—merging diverse letterforms, layouts, and typographic techniques to evoke a spectrum of emotions. The collection plays with structure, transforming type into a visual language that speaks beyond words. Visual candy that delivers design, form and feeling.

Not Everyone Needs a BRIGHT FUTURE

According to the research, artificial lights from nearshore cities cause disorientation of the Sea Turtle hatchlings, causing them to linger in nearshore zones and drawing them away from the ocean. The characters were created with the flippers of the Sea turtles and were intentionally created to look like LED lights. Additionally, the double vision effect mimics the blinding glare of artificial lights, reflecting the physical discomfort and confusion these creatures face

PROGRES/REGRES zine

The creating a zine was a multi-stage process. The first step was to prepare the intaglio matrixes made from recycled Tetra Pak milk packaging. Cutting out with an utility knife, gouging with a screw or tearing out fragments of the aluminum side of the packaging is a departure from current trends in designing digital illustrations. Then, the scan of prints was made and designs were transferred to a screen for screen printing. The result was an edition of 25 unique zines in A5 format.

Blueprint

Blueprint is a variable font made from the shapes of an architectural ruler, it’s a typeface born from the dialogue between manual drawing and the technological possibilities of variable fonts.

Demo

Demo is a research lab for experimental visual language, it embraces exploring new techniques and takes process over result. For its logo, students were asked to collage the word “Demo” out of various pieces of letters.

Parade

Parade is a display typeface designed as a living, modular system where typography becomes movement and rhythm. Inspired by the idea of a visual procession, each letter acts as part of a choreographed ensemble, creating dynamic compositions. Built from modular structures and organic, circular forms, the typeface balances flexibility with coherence. Its rounded shapes evoke continuity and flow, transforming words into expressive, evolving graphic forms.

Neobleed

“Neobleed” is a modular typeface that draws inspiration from the blackletter script, also known as Gothic script, and its lowercase serifs. The term “Gothic” was used by Renaissance humanists to describe this typeface, which they considered barbaric and barely legible. “Neobleed” rehabilitates this negative term by embracing a raw, complex, and dramatic visual aesthetic.

Les Cendres du Naufrage – Dominique White

Poster for the exhibition Les Cendres du Naufrage by English artist Dominique White at Triangle-Astérides in Marseille. The exhibition presents fictional relics made from raw materials and salvaged objects, evoking a Black population condemned to perpetual migration and disappearance at sea. The poster’s typographic treatment draws from the title, conceived as an organic, plastic vestige reflecting the exhibition’s dual and tragic narrative.

Expressive “between” Experimental

This graphic explores the overlap between the words “experimental” and “expressive.” By allowing letterforms to collide, share space, and interrupt one another, the piece reflects a looser approach to typographic thinking, suggesting that experimentation can emerge through observation, restraint, and composition, rather than reliance on texture or visual noise.

When Government Branding Becomes a Battleground

We first met Eduardo Aires in 2016, in his studio in Porto, while working on the Slanted Portugal issue. At that time, Aires was already internationally recognized for the City of Porto’s visual identity system (launched in 2014), a project widely discussed as a benchmark for contemporary municipal branding and flexible identity systems. That early encounter framed our understanding of Aires as a designer concerned less with stylistic authorship and more with institutions, territory, and the long-term role of design in public life.

Nearly a decade later, our conversation returned to these themes under far more charged circumstances: the aborted visual identity of Portugal’s XXIII Government designed between 2022 and 2023, implemented throughout 2023, and politically dismantled in 2024. From the outset, it was clear that this was not simply a discussion about a logo, but about the limits of design in democratic institutions, and the risks designers face when political conflict absorbs visual systems.

Why a government identity became a national controversy

In many democracies, changes to government identity systems are treated as administrative infrastructure. They are tools that help citizens recognize official communication across websites, documents, press conferences, and public services. In Portugal, however, this redesign became a symbolic battleground.

Aires was explicit about the original intent: “This was never about redesigning the country. The country already has a flag. What we were doing was designing how the government speaks with its citizens.” The distinction is fundamental, yet it was repeatedly collapsed in public debate.

As later reported by Reuters, the simplified identity was criticized by political opponents for removing historic heraldic elements, and was reinstated by the incoming conservative government as its first official act (Reuters, 3 April 2024).

But let us jump back and have a closer look at this identity project that was commissioned under Prime Minister António Costa, leader of the Partido Socialista (PS), a center-left socialist government that held office from 2015 until late 2023. The XXIII Government, formed in March 2022 following a Socialist majority victory, initiated the redesign as part of a broader effort to modernize state communication.

The redesign therefore originated neither under a right-wing administration nor as a nationalist gesture. It was conceived within a socialist-led government and framed explicitly as an administrative and communicative update for the digital era.

The brief: government communication in the digital era

According to Aires, the brief was unusually precise. “They asked for something contemporary, something that would really work in a digital era, not something decorative, not something nostalgic.” The task was to clarify how the government communicates with citizens across websites, interfaces, documents, press conferences, and public information systems.

Commissioning, duration, and resources

The project emerged from a competitive pitch and was developed over approximately eighteen months, between early 2022 and mid-2023, on a publicly reported budget of €74,000. Aires addressed persistent misconceptions directly: “I was accused of earning huge amounts of money. In reality, half of the budget went straight to the digital team. The rest had to cover the studio work for a year and a half.”

Method and rationale: territory, not style

Aires’ methodology centres on what he calls ‘territory’. “I always search my answers in the territory, never in style,” he explained. In this case, the Portuguese flag became the conceptual source. Not as an object to be replaced, but as material to be translated. The resulting synthesis deliberately removed small heraldic details. “If you reduce those elements for digital use, they disappear. My responsibility was to make sure nothing is lost in translation.”

The Guardian later summarised this approach by noting that the redesign aimed at clarity and adaptability rather than symbolism, while the backlash framed it as an ideological gesture (The Guardian, 10 April 2024).

The ‘soft launch’: visibility without explanation

One of the most consequential decisions was the absence of a formal public launch. Prime Minister Costa, according to Aires, believed that “communication is not news,” and therefore preferred a gradual, almost invisible rollout.

In practice, this meant that the identity entered public life through use rather than announcement. “We started with the government website,” Aires explained. “Then the Pope came to Portugal, and suddenly the identity was everywhere—television, newspapers, billboards. It was incredible.”

Throughout the summer and early autumn of 2023, the system appeared continuously: weekly press conferences, official statements, and the highly visible presentation of the national budget in September and October. Yet, as Aires recalled, “No one was asking, ‘What is this?’ No one called the communication department. We were wondering among ourselves: is it so well accepted, or so smooth, that nobody notices?”

This silence proved deceptive. “At the same time, we were suspicious,” Aires added. “Because when nobody asks questions, it can also mean that something is waiting to explode.”

November 2023: political rupture

In November 2023, Portugal entered a period of political crisis. Following statements by the Attorney General referencing an investigation in which António Costa’s name was mentioned, the Prime Minister resigned. Although he was not charged, the resignation triggered the dissolution of parliament and the calling of early elections.

From this moment onward, the identity project became politically exposed. “That was when everything changed,” Aires said. As the political climate shifted, the project was weaponised. “From November onwards, I received threats you cannot imagine,” Aires said. “I went to the police. They told me to remove my address from my website.”

This personal exposure was widely reported. Monocle described how the controversy escalated during the election campaign, turning a functional design system into a proxy for broader ideological conflict (Monocle, 13 May 2024).

Election campaign and weaponisation

The snap legislative elections took place on 10 March 2024. During the campaign, the government identity was repeatedly instrumentalised as a symbol of alleged ‘wokeness’ and disrespect for national tradition. Luís Montenegro publicly promised that removing the identity would be among his first actions in power. The most aggressive attacks came from the far-right party Chega and its leader André Ventura.

Aires described the dynamic bluntly: “They were not discussing design. They were discussing ideology through design.”

Change of government and dismantling of the project

Following the elections, a centre-right minority government led by Luís Montenegro (Aliança Democrática) took office on 2 April 2024, with parliamentary support from Chega. The very first official act was the removal of the new visual identity and the reinstatement of the traditional heraldic emblem.

International reporting framed this decision explicitly as political symbolism rather than administrative necessity (Reuters, 3 April 2024; The Guardian, 10 April 2024).

Aires’ core insight: brand the government, not the country

The experience sharpened Aires’ theoretical position. “A country already has a flag. What needs to be branded is the government—the machine that communicates with citizens about tax, justice, and social security.”

This distinction reframes the conflict. The identity was conceived as an infrastructural tool of democratic clarity, but was publicly reframed as a symbolic intervention into national identity.

What this case teaches about design in democracy

First, design timelines and political timelines rarely align. A system built through research and dialogue can be dismantled overnight for symbolic reasons.

Second, technical decisions are easily moralised. As Aires observed, “They were not discussing design. They were discussing ideology through design.”

Finally, the case reveals a gap in how societies value institutional design. Citizens benefit from clarity and coherence, but these benefits are diffuse while outrage is immediate and politically profitable

The Portuguese case demonstrates how institutional design operates within fragile political ecosystems. Design systems require continuity, explanation, and trust. Electoral politics rewards rupture, symbolism, and antagonism.

Aires’ project ultimately failed not on design grounds, but because it entered a political moment in which clarity was less valuable than conflict. As a case study, it reveals the limits of design when institutional responsibility gives way to ideological theatre.

© Pictures by Eduardo Aires, Thomas Mandl

Further reading

Studio Eduardo Aires—XXIII Governo da República Portuguesa
Studio Eduardo Aires—Porto City Identity (2014)
Reuters — “Portugal’s new government restores traditional coat of arms” (3 April 2024).
The Guardian — “Portugal government logo row” (10 April 2024).
Monocle — Feature on the Portuguese government identity controversy (13 May 2024).