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The characteristic of my font is inspired by the [http://www.dmc-usa.com/Education/Technique-Overviews/Cross-Stitch/~/media/Media/Education/Technique%2031/Cross%20Stitch%20311/CF_PartialStitches_v3.ashx?h=305&w=400 cross stitch] and the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zigzag_stitch zigzag stitch], therefore I named it ''Stitchfont''. <br> | The characteristic of my font is inspired by the [http://www.dmc-usa.com/Education/Technique-Overviews/Cross-Stitch/~/media/Media/Education/Technique%2031/Cross%20Stitch%20311/CF_PartialStitches_v3.ashx?h=305&w=400 cross stitch] and the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zigzag_stitch zigzag stitch], therefore I named it ''Stitchfont''. <br> | ||
At first I've sketched every glyph on paper. Therefor used the 'X', /, \ to imitate a stitching pattern. <br> | At first I've sketched every glyph on paper. Therefor used the 'X', /, \ to imitate a stitching pattern. <br> | ||
So I converted my [https://www.dropbox.com/s/bdo5w9jzle2o2c8/idee-stitched.png?dl=0 analogue sketch] into code. The lower-case letters are a bit | So I converted my [https://www.dropbox.com/s/bdo5w9jzle2o2c8/idee-stitched.png?dl=0 analogue sketch] into code. The lower-case letters are a bit thinner than the upper-case ones, but got the same shape. <br> | ||
For displaying the type face of the ''Stitchfont'', I used the [http://www.principiadiscordia.com/book/12.php Zen Story], a chapter of the Principia Discordia. | For displaying the type face of the ''Stitchfont'', I used the [http://www.principiadiscordia.com/book/12.php Zen Story], a chapter of the Principia Discordia. | ||
Revision as of 11:23, 26 January 2016
This is the »Wild Type« page of — Jessica Hüttig
PARAMETRIC LETTER
For the first homework I created the capital letter R in Processing and named my variables
by the guidelines of the Anatomy of Typeface.
Code can be viewed on OpenProcessing
TYPOGRAPHIC SYSTEM
Our task was to create a typographic system from scratch using the Fontastic library and export it as a TrueType-Font.
The characteristic of my font is inspired by the cross stitch and the zigzag stitch, therefore I named it Stitchfont.
At first I've sketched every glyph on paper. Therefor used the 'X', /, \ to imitate a stitching pattern.
So I converted my analogue sketch into code. The lower-case letters are a bit thinner than the upper-case ones, but got the same shape.
For displaying the type face of the Stitchfont, I used the Zen Story, a chapter of the Principia Discordia.
Click here for downloading the .tff file.
Code can be viewed on OpenProcessing.
TRANSFORM A FONT
coming soon ...
ANIMATED LETTER
Simple H, animated with the Ani library, that turns into a house when you press the mouse
and will be destroyed when you press the key 'd'.
Code can be viewed on OpenProcessing
EXAMPLES CREATED WITH DRAWBOT
We had a nice workshop, where we had been introduced in DrawBot and RoboFont.
Our task was, to explore DrawBot and create a few designs by arranging glyphs or typography in an interesting way.
WRITING SYSTEM
Yay, just another geometric alphabet, that I created in RoboFont.
The idea was, to rotate every letter 90 degrees clockwise and to simplify them into filled geometric forms, like triangles and squares.
If the letter has a Counter, I tried to show this with a gap inside the geometric form or between two geometric forms of one letter.
I actually created only upper-case letters, but for the Kafgenstein-example in Processing, I used the same forms for the lower-case ones.
Otherwise you would only see the first character of a noun. Missing punctuation characters are unfortunately displayed as unfilled rectangles.
Take a look at the pretty pictures. ;)
for better resolution: File:Kafgenstein geometric.pdf
3D ALPHABET
A few glyphs of my geometric alphabet turned into 3D!
I modeled some glyphs in Blender to type »WILD TYPE« and displayed them in Processing by using the PeasyCam-library.
I modified the basic-code, because in some way it didn't worked well for me. Code can be viewed on OpenProcessing.