Clone

As its name perhaps implies, Clone feels familiar at first glance. The roundness of the letters with strong crossbars lends itself to that notion. The monospaced ‘i’, symmet­rical ‘w’, and smooth ‘s’ fit the description. Upon further inspection, though, the type­face has a number of unique characteristics that make it enjoyable to read and set.

Looking at unique combinations of letters and words that people don’t often see, the combination of ‘z’ and ‘o’ came top of mind for me. Within seconds of typing the name “Zoë”, I noticed a really cool rogue serif on the ‘Z’. The serif balances the roundness of the other letters to make it feel natural in a way that I haven’t often seen with similar typefaces.

I was drawn to using Clone for its flows and balances; from word to word, how it scales from sentences to paragraphs. Taking a closer look at why I found the scalability worth mentioning, I realized it was often due to the bookending nature of the first and last letters of words. They created a scaleable unit that locked the word together quickly and pleasurably. The entry point of each letter, both vertically and horiz­ontally, made it extremely easy to read.

As I used Clone, I sensed that Lasko Dzurovski spent a lot of time meticulously crafting the flow of each letter. There’s a lot readability magic happening. Over and over, I discovered fascinating letter combinations that made words sing in ways I hadn’t noticed before. Words like “benchmark”, “currently”, and “question” produce the locked-down bookend effect I described earlier. “Breaking” is a thing of beauty. It’s as though Dzurovski took every combination and gave it attention that others don’t take the time to consider.

Greta Mono

The lot of monospaced typefaces has improved considerably in recent years, but still, too many are little more than the utilitarian servants they were apparently born to be.

Flat and flavorless, their design reveals more techné and much less poiesis: their characters queue up duti­fully, albeit inharmoniously, as they pay primary heed to the pitch constraint. In these faces, the norm­ally slender ‘i’ and ‘l’ appear emaciated; the fuller-figured ‘m’ and ‘w’ squeeze themselves in as best as they can. The result is an unhappy marriage of warp and weft, and so dullness is compounded by discordance.

But for a handful of monospaced faces, designers have turned the pitch constraint on its head, leveraging it in deft explorations of stroke and space. Fifteen years ago, with his first monospaced face (FF Eureka Mono), Peter Biľak vanquished this constraint via letter­spacing: he gave his glyphs ample room to breathe. With his recent Greta Mono (produced with Nikola Djurek), Biľak takes an even more elegant approach: stroke contrast.

Witness the upright, wherein (particularly in the heavier of its ten weights) contrasting strokes impart a vitality seen in few faces, much less monospaced ones. A geo-humanist mélange of arcs here, right angles there, it does its job, and it looks beautiful to boot: monospaced, but certainly not monochrome. The italic, with its cleaved curves and asymmetrical twists, is cheeky and a just a touch scary, its dynamic letterforms taut and ready to spring. Take note: this Greta Mono is a step change from its prototype seen for a time on the pages of Dwell. Unlike its prede­cessor, this new face shares more with Greta Sans than with its seriffed counterpart, Greta Text.

The coders, musicians, scientists, and transcriptionists I know will love this font. They say they’re on a quest for the ideal monospaced face, and with Greta Mono, I can tell them to stop searching. With over 1000 glyphs — including Cyrillic and Greek, and even circled numbers — it comes with all the fixins, and is very much a product of now. You don’t need anyone to tell you that Biľak is a brilliant designer; his work speaks for itself. With Greta Mono, it’s the same simple story: he’s done it again.

FS Brabo

“If you remember the shape of your spoon at lunch, it has to be the wrong shape. The spoon and the letter are tools; one to take food from the bowl, the other to take information off the page.” — Adrian Frutiger

Frutiger’s words come to my mind as I review Fernando Mello’s FS Brabo.

Being an author and the designer of my own books, I feel that creating a layout turns my research, thoughts, and writing into a visible form. It is the summing up of each project. For me, the layout phase starts with selecting a suitable typeface. The ideal typeface for my application needs to support the content, and should assist the reader in taking “information off the page” without feeling distracted. At the same time, I love to work with details, giving my audience something to discover.

Mello studied historic metal typefaces archived at the Plantin-Moretus Museum in Antwerp, and the tradition of the Garalde style becomes apparent when applying FS Brabo in running text. Set in a small size, the typeface appears calm and balanced. It gently supports the continuous flow of the reading eye.

FS Brabo is a small family, with only four weights. To me, this is a positive invitation that enables me to stay focused in my design. Mello does offer a set of ligatures, swashes, and other ornamentals; and this set of glyphs — especially rich for the italics — provides a graphic designer with several options. It is my freedom to decide, to choose: perhaps the slanted capitals to set text in italics, or the flamboyant capitals for an italicized subhead, or maybe letters with eccentric endings for a playful sensibility.

FS Brabo is truly like a thoughtfully designed spoon that enhances the gusto of a creation.

ListenUp: Jesse Boykins III feat. Luke James: Likeminded

Jesse Boykins III feat. Luke James: Likeminded


In now-classic Jesse Boykins III style, the LA-based singer/songwriter has released a super-lush and sexy record in his latest release: Bartholomew LP. Featuring guest spots from Syd (of The Internet), Willow Smith, Trinidad James and J*Davey, it’s……

Continue Reading…

Blend

Blend is a large system of twenty-one display faces for packaging and advertising. It pulls off the considerable feat of being puppy-dog cute and charming while retaining the strength and readability of classic roman letterforms.

It has a soft-ended, upright lower case that incorpor­ates some italic features, while retaining the authority of a roman. Its narrow letterforms would not be ideal for extended text, but it is perfect for its intended use of short display. Designer Sabrina Mariana Lopez has also drawn a lovely relaxed cursive for the system.

But the glory of Blend is its many sets of caps. It has regular, bold, inline, engraved, and fills for both the open styles. The caps have been softened and made charming through subtle stressing and modeling, rounded terminals, and art deco features. The result is that they are totally pleasing, yet classically sound and readable. With its huge palette of related faces, I really hope we will be seeing a lot of Blend. Because it is at the same time so charming but free of excess and quirkiness, I don’t think we will get tired of seeing it. This one can last.

ListenUp: Florence + the Machine: Stand by Me

Florence + the Machine: Stand by Me


It is exceptionally hard to cover a song like Ben E King’s profound classic “Stand by Me,” while holding true to the value of the original and adding contemporary developments. Unsurprisingly, Florence + the Machine have pulled it off with their ethereal……

Continue Reading…

Inka

Inka is a perfect book and editorial typeface, crafted with attention to even the tiniest details. It will certainly work well in books, newspapers, or magazines; and thanks to the large repertoire of styles and huge glyph set, it can be of use in scientific publications or school books as well. Relatively narrow lowercase letters make Inka quite economical, too.

A very large family of sixty-four styles, Inka is divided into two subfamilies (A and B). Inka A has standard proportions, while Inka B has more compact ascenders and descenders. Each subfamily consists of four grades with descriptive names: Small, Text, Title, and Display; these are further subdivided into four weights. The difference between grades is not exaggerated, so the combinations look natural.

The diacritics harmonize perfectly with the letters. The accents of the text styles are heavy enough to be legible in small sizes, while the display ones are crispier and more delicate. Samuel was very serious about the details: The ascenders of Croatian ‘đ’ and Maltese ‘ħ’ miss the head serif (in Inka B only), certain ligatures have accented variants (fí, fľ, cť or sť), and on top of that, there is one cool contextual feature: letters with ascenders following ď, ľ and ť lose their head serifs to avoid collision with the vertical caron.

The fonts contain a very generous repertoire of 1113 glyphs, including small caps. Some letters have alternates, namely ‘a’, ‘f’, ‘g’, ‘Q’ and ‘&’. And not only are superior and inferior figures available; there is a complete set of lower- and uppercase letters available in their superior and inferior forms respectively (including alternate shapes of ‘a’, ‘f’, and ‘g’). Apart from the standard sets of figures, Inka offers small-cap numerals together with their tabular versions, and positive and negative indices. There are many other symbols and decorative elements available, too: arrows, basic geometric shapes, and manicules.

After spending some time with Inka, I can say it is an ideal multipurpose serif family, beautiful in large sizes and “invisible” in text sizes, with an unusually considerate treatment of Central and Eastern European characters.

Lively's All-Day Series Lingerie: The affordable underwear start-up's new styles draw inspiration from vintage swimwear, while staying true to comfort

Lively's All-Day Series Lingerie

Lively, which launched earlier this spring, is proving itself to be an attractive, inexpensive option that doesn’t sacrifice comfort or quality. Their new soft and summery “All-Day Series” continues their design mantra of combining the aesthetic……

Continue Reading…

Eric Gill Series

Gill Sans, love it or loathe it, is a found­ational typeface of the modern world. We’ve all seen it, we’re all familiar with it, it’s everywhere, it feels like a done deal, part of the bedrock, immutable and beyond the reach of any redesign. But Monotype has done that thing — they’ve created a new Gill Sans, using the original sketches, reanim­ating the discontinued Deco style, incorp­orating custom additions as OpenType alternates.

Overall, the original has been cleaned and tidied and made into a fully functioning and integrated digital whole. Goodbye to the “eccentric” mess of styles and variants and hello to the bright new dawn of Gill Sans Nova. It’s pretty good, and I’m glad it’s been done. The spacing is a whole load better, and using it at display sizes isn’t the tedious job of manually resetting most of it that it once was. The bolder weights still have their original design and the lowercase ‘e’ and ‘a’ still make me twitch a bit — two lumpen henchmen from a children’s cartoon. I’m sure plenty of people love them, but not me.

Joanna, less well known but also widespread, is the unfussy, useful, and dependable book face, the kind of typeface you read without noticing and close to being that proverbial crystal goblet. It’s been compre­hens­ively and beautifully remastered as a fully functional digital typeface. Previous digitizations felt flimsy and inconsistent, never quite matching the clarity and (importantly) the ink density of the metal type, so Joanna Nova is a massive improvement. Joanna Sans Nova is a new design based on what Gill might have done, and is a solid and classy humanist design. It appeared first as an e-reader typeface and, unsurpris­ingly, works perfectly on low-resolution displays. Although it is quite beautiful, it very much feels like the support role for Joanna Nova, designed as a good choice for typographic contrast and variety rather than as something you’d go out of your way to choose on its own merits.

The Eric Gill Series is a fantastic thing by George Ryan, Ben Jones, and Terrance Weinzierl. They’ve done some important and admirable work to respect Gill’s original designs, and the typefaces now feel integrated and usable as a whole system. Previously specifying Gill in a brand felt risky, since the whole family of weights never quite felt like a coherent design — extending the brand was a process hedged with caveats and warnings. Now it feels genuinely usable.

My problem with the series is with Gill himself. As much as I can truly admire his art, his design, his brilliance, I can’t deny my sense of disgust toward him and his crimes. I understand, of course, that no work of art exists in isolation; how many died in wars commemorated in great sculpture and painting, how many starved as resources were diverted to create great palaces, how much talent was squandered to pamper the egos of the rich and powerful? But they’re not things we use; they’re safely roped off or sanitized by touristic propaganda: we can identify them as history. How do we use a modern, revitalized tool both named for the victim and the perpetrator? Surely, only with care, understanding, and an awareness of what is appropriate. When we write about them, when we promote them, we need sensitivity. We need, however gently and tactfully, to warn.

Disclaimer: I only reviewed the Latin. It’s a terrible omission for which I can only apologize. If you need the Cyrillic or Greek, be careful to review the quality of the character set: it may not match the Latin.

Buy: The Avalanches "Since I Left You" Vinyl Reissue




The Avalanches’ first record Since I Left You, released in 2000, famously features a whopping 3,500 samples. With slightly fewer samples, the band’s second record came out this year, but—much to the delight of fans—the Australian group also reissued……

Continue Reading…