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No Age - Everything In Between Booklet
Designed by Brian Roettinger
(Source: handheldheart.com)
Tags: No Age Brian Roettinger Graphic Design Typography Design Type
No Age - Everything In Between Booklet
Designed by Brian Roettinger
(Source: handheldheart.com)
Portraits of typographers by Nous Vous.
(Source: theoinglis)
Screenprinted bed cover. Based on my sleeping pattern
Graphic Design 3D Type | by Lewis Allen
Ernesto | by Lewis Allen
When Avatar, the biggest grossing movie of all time was released, one section of the audience was immediately outraged. Graphic designers hated it. Why? They didn’t like the font that director James Cameron had chosen for the subtitles.
“I hated it on the posters and then threw up a little in my mouth when I realised I would have to read that ugly font throughout the film in the subtitles,” one blogger commented.
(Source: BBC)

Why did Brian Wilson use Cooper Black on the cover of Pet Sounds? Why did Obama use Gotham for his election propaganda? It has long been apparent that typefaces reflect the character of the person using them, and that type choice, as well as the words that are typed, is a powerful conveyor of meaning.
At Pentagram, we wanted people to be able to understand that meaning properly and use it more consciously. Hence our ‘What Type Are You’ application. Researched over seven years with a team of 23 academics across Eastern Europe, ‘What Type Are You’ asks the four key character questions of our day, analyses your responses in exceptional detail and recommends one of 16 typefaces as a result.
The recommendation is sometimes controversial but always unerringly true. Said one respondent, “At first I felt angry when I was told my type is Pistilli Roman but two weeks later, I was completely reconciled to it. Now I wonder why I ever thought I was a Gill Sans.”