Forum Moderators: not2easy
Thanks very muchly...
Kat
I think that anyone really interested in fonts and typography needs to have a solid foundation in the history of the alphabet and the evolution of letterforms... and should probably have some hands-on experience in edged-pen italic calligraphy.
I don't know where you get that these days. I was lucky enough to study in college with a man named Lloyd Reynolds, who was largely responsible for the revival of italic calligraphy and the study of old letterforms. Lloyd pointed out the if you were going to learn to draw people, you'd be well advised to draw them from life rather than from reproductions in books.
He felt the same about letterforms... but how do you draw a letterform from life? We used edged pens (Osmiroid fountain pens), and we practiced loops and lines for months as we learned the rhythms of edged pen calligraphy, from which most Western letter forms evolved. We looked at old alphabets and medieval manuscripts. We tried to make letters as alive as possible.
Lloyd's book, which I'm not sure is still in print, I believe is called "An Introduction to Italic Calligraphy." I'm sure there are other books, now. This sounds old fashioned, I know, but the alphabet goes back several thousands of years... and our electronic tools now are so removed from the origins of writing that it's easy to forget how letters came about and why alphabets look the way they do.
I'm sure others on the boards here can supply a more modern perspective, but this is how I'd start anyway....
A couple years ago, a font designer created a new set of fonts for Le Monde (Paris newspaper). This was the paper's first font change in 50 years, and I heard the designer earned something like a half million dollars.
I mention this because it shows the depth and complexity of font design. The more I learn, the more I'm amazed.
There's a great book called "Stop Stealing Sheep & Find Out How Type Works" by Erik Spiekermann and E. M. Ginger. That one gave me a real boost, and I use the knowledge it gave me every time I do a print piece.
As CSS comes more into play, the web has a chance to gain from this field as well.