• 字体
  • 字体家族
  • 字体公司
  • 字体设计师
  • 字体样张
  • 资讯
  • 帮助
字客网>资讯>详情

1 Year of Web FontFonts: Exclusive FontFont For Free

时间:2011-02-24 16:31:34| 新闻|浏览:138|来源:The FontFeed|作者:Yves Peters
导语Exactly one year ago, on February 24, 2010, type collection speci

Exactly one year ago, on February 24, 2010, type collection specifically aimed at web designers: gave away its first .woff font FF Nuvo for free. And now FontFont is celebrating the first anniversary of this new decisive step in digital typography by offering the exclusive web FontFont FF World Wide Web for free. The font is based on FF World by British graphic design icon Neville Brody. This type family is derived from one of several lettering styles created for his seminal poster for the Mike Tyson–Tony Tubbs World Heavyweight Championship at the Tokyo Dome.

Poster for World Heavyweight Championship, Tokyo 1988

Neville Brody's Tyson–Tubbs poster is remarkable, because it was highly unconventional compared to other collaterals announcing boxing matches. The usual scenario would be to have big images of both fighters, with medium-sized typography for their names, the location and date of the match, and other information. However Brody opted for a purely typographic design with a bare-bones, centred structure, using letter forms specially drawn for this poster. The importance of this match is conveyed by the simplicity of the design – the last names of Tyson and Tubbs in very large geometric white letters are powerful and authoritative. Although they belong to two separate information clusters, having the words "Fight" and "Tokyo" in white too emphasises the straightforwardness of the poster by paring the information down to just "what" is going to happen, and "where". The weight of the design suggests its collapse; it is held fast by the strength of the two bars and the choice of a strong second colour.

Neville Brody in the mid-nineties, flipping through his second monograph The Graphic Language of Neville Brody 2.

Brody's early FontFonts were digital versions of the hand-drawn alphabets and headlines he had made during the previous decade. The person who helped Brody complete and digitise these fonts was David Berlow, founder of the Font Bureau in Boston. The Dome/World/Tokyo series was the result of an interesting collaboration. Brody showed Berlow the poster, for which he had drawn single words using a different type of lettering in each line; the idea was to create a complete font based on each style. After scrutinising the poster, the analytic Berlow remarked that in most lines two or three slightly different construction principles had been used. Consequently, not only did each of the lines in the poster become a digital typeface (named after the words they had been used for: FF Tyson, FF Dome, FF Tokyo, and FF World), each of the fonts also had two or three variants, based on Berlow's critical analysis of Brody's lettering.

Download FF World Wide Web on FontShop's Free Fonts page.

Please bear with us while we get FF World Wide Web online.

0
  • 关注字客网公众号领取Z码
  • 关注字体先森公众号抽取SVIP
相关字体设计师
相关字体公司
1 Year of Web FontFonts: Exclusive FontFont For Free 网友点评
游客:文明上网,理性发言。 看不清?换一张
1 Year of Web FontFonts: Exclusive FontFont For Free 最新评论
暂无相关评论