Variable Fonts Webinar

TypeType offers a Variable Fonts Webinar for web designers, graphic designers, and agencies. If you ever wanted to learn what variable fonts are, what technologies enable them, which types of variable fonts exist, what tasks they can solve, what the advantages and disadvantages of variable fonts are, which softwares support variable fonts and so on, this is the right event for you. TypeType also demonstrate examples of variable fonts in use. And the best? TypeType decided to share all this knowledge for free. Just make sure to register, so that they can send you notifications to connect to the webinar in advance.

Variable fonts—the present of graphic design
Variable fonts are a breakthrough in modern typography. The technology appeared in 2016 but not all designers know about its existence yet. According to a 2019 Monotype study, 71 % designers all over the world don’t know yet what variable fonts are, or have heard about them but don’t understand how to use them. TypeType decided to change this and would like to tell you about variable fonts and the technology behind them. They’ll talk about correct use of variable fonts and what advantages they provide for designers’ work.

About TypeType
TypeType is an independent font design studio established in 2013. More than 35.000 designers all over the world have been using their fonts since. In their work, they have always relied on a scientific approach, deep analytics, and implementation of innovative technologies. TypeType started programming variable fonts in 2018. Currently, their collection features 13 variable fonts. In addition, they were among the first ones to master variable fonts hinting, which has drastically increased their web performance.

The TypeType team will be happy to share their variable font creation experience.

Variable Fonts Webinar

When? April 7th, 2021, 4 p.m. (UTC)
Speakers: TypeType Font Foundry Team
Language: English
Free participation, but make sure to register in advance

Isometric System

These four images form part of a larger body of work titled: ‘ISOMETRIC SYSTEM’. By combining flat colour planes with planes of gradient colour, an illusion of a three-dimensional form is created on a two-dimensional plane. Colour choices have been selected with a light and dark sensibility that highlights the relationships and contrasts between abutting colours and planes. Isometric projection isn’t the way we usually view objects, and the shading and colourisation of the planes don’t conform to any logical light source, rendering the work somewhere between the pictorial and the abstract.

Sean Hogan: 30 Works: 2014 – 2020

‘SEAN HOGAN: 30 WORKS: 2014 – 2020’.
This book spans my interest in coded visual languages, grids, pattern, music, and systems. In these conceptual works, I explored methods of ocular colour mixing, investigated the subversion of colour and words by the manipulation of the International Code of Signals, and developed sets of rules to inform and guide the work’s formal aesthetics (geometry, colour, proportion, line). In reciprocating a form of algorithmic thinking, these works embody and embrace the evolution of humans’ increasingly symbiotic relationship with digital technology.

Stay Home Poster

The light blue colour marks a health and hygiene emergency by closely relating to the colour used for water, sterilisation and hygiene representations.

The poster’s visual impact is subtle while eliciting reliability, acceptance and safety to the viewer. For conveying the message, the widely recognisable font Helvetica is applied on a large scale. Its use relates to the simplicity of the instruction, communicated on a global level, calling for vigilance and adherence. The illustration of crossed arms, found in the letter B of Typefesse Pleine, represents the body part that should be thoroughly disinfected according to state instructions.

Multi-Culture

In order to promote a dialog on the theme “Equity” and “Differences” on Campus, and with the goal to support the wish of his university to integrate awareness on themes such as “Racial Equality” and “Inclusivity” in the curriculum, Jean-Benoit Levy has taken the opportunity of a simple exercise where his students work on their own portrait to tackle this delicate subject. Can we openly communicate about the different color of our skins ?
Working with the tone of their own skin, limited to four single colors, each student have been asked to translate their portrait into a colorful halftone effect. By doing so, they found themselves embracing naturally their differences.

Transmutation

As a vibration in the electromagnetic spectrum,
colors appear in an optical window, within the visible light after microwaves and before x-rays, just between infrared and ultraviolet.
As colors are rarely working individually, they
must take their best expressive individuality
when they act together.
Like a ongoing sound that is transforming, this composition mutate itself from the straight
cold dark edges of the rectangular format to become a circular glowing element in its center.
Morphing slowly from one shape to the other with small variations, this composition symbolize the surrounding changes in the natural order that is permanently transforming us.

Red and Square Alphabet

This is a very blocky alphabet. Initially, I made it as a silkscreen in a series of 12″ square typography posters (https://dastner.com/typography-posters/). It turned into the cover of a DJ mix I made with my new german records. At one of the NYC TypeThursday critiques, an idea turned came up to rebuild the layers using laser-cut plexiglass and then have lights shine through it. It was easy to construct it but hard to photograph it, which resulted in so many reflections.

colour matters everywhere

Fun project: what if bananas were green instead of yellow and cucumbers were suddenly pink? Would they still taste good then? And if the toadstool and the STOP sign no longer appear in warning red … what happens to us then? Form follows function or rather colour trumps form?! And would pink sheep feel more fashionable or are they just no longer accepted as part of their group …? When does colour become more than just colour? Politics and psychology always play into it – but just in spite of – that the colouring variant for everyone: Make your world (colourful) as you like it!

Nur Parken, Nur Parken

In cooperation with the Stadtwerken Saarlouis, ten power houses in the Saarlouis urban area were artistically designed. These form a permanent open-air exhibition.
The context of the found power house is characterized by open spaces that are exclusively declared as private parking areas and thus do not provide for any public use. Based on this deplorable state of affairs, the typographic supergraphic “Nur Parken, Nur Parken” was created.
By using found symbols and signs as well as barriers to mark parking spaces, a lettering was developed that aims to draw attention to the waste of public space caused by parking areas.

The Dark Side of The Moon

This anamorphic painting is named and inspired by “The Dark Side of the Moon”. The original design is inverted, first of all by working on an off-white background instead of a black one. The circular “dark side” reveals all its colors with, on the furthest plane, a fade progressing from a mauvish purple to melon yellow. On the foreground the colors shift, going from lemon yellow to light blue. The round “moon” acts as a lens, magnifying the triangular prism. Acrylic colors were combined with spray paint to create clean and smooth gradients.The palette was directly sampled from the stained-glass windows which filter the daylight into the room, an elegant 1800’s interior.
Photo by Luca Farinet

Claudia Skoda

The publication Claudia Skoda – Dressed to Thrill is now available at Slanted Shop!

As a pioneer and icon of Berlin’s underground culture, Claudia Skoda defined the fashion of the 1970s and 1980s. She knitted delicate yarns—having taught herself the handwork techniques—into groundbreaking, body-hugging designs that triggered a revolution in our understanding of knitwear. Superstars such as David Bowie and Iggy Pop were soon among her friends. Skoda’s performance-like fashion shows became famous: they were staged as spectacular events in the Congress Hall or the Egyptian Museum and caused an international sensation.

This comprehensive catalog Claudia Skoda – Dressed to Thrill is published to accompany her first solo exhibition and presents fashion, photographs, films, and music by a wide range of artists, including Martin Kippenberger, Luciano Castelli, Salomé, Jim Rakete, Ulrike Ottinger, Silke Grossmann, Manuel Göttsching, and Kraftwerk. The book not only highlights Skoda’s fashion designs, but also looks at how they were produced and marketed. In addition, it explores her living community and workshop Fabrikneu, her fashion shows and stores, her time in New York, as well as her social networks and her collaborations with many different artists. This book is the first major compilation of Claudia Skoda’s works and includes a text by fashion designer Wolfgang Joop.

There is an accompanying exhibition about Claudia Skoda’s Work at Kunstbibliothek, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin from April 1st until July 18th, 2021.

Claudia Skoda

Editor: Britta Bommert, Kunstbibliothek, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin
Publisher: Verlag Kettler
Volume: 240 pages
Format: 24 × 30 cm
Language: German
Bookbinding: Hardcover
ISBN: 978-3-86206-829-6
EAN: 9783862068296
Price: € 42.–
Buy

Night Soil / Fake Paradise

Poster inspired by Melanie Bonajo’s short-film Night Soil/Fake Paradise, 2014.
“Can ayahuasca have the same significance for our day as LSD had for the 1960s? Exploring this question Night Soil/Fake Paradise presents an amalgama of personal accounts on the spiritual and bodily experiences with the Amazonian substance, giving particular weight to the feminine voice and point of view, traditionally neglected in psychedelic research.”

„Fluff“

With the ‘Tanzkamera Obscura’ movements of dancers are caught and transferred into light-drawings. The arms and legs of the dancers are—like a puppet on strings—connected to a hand-built machine that registers them into a drawing. The camera is a self-designed 3D printed camera obscura with an integrated light drawings system. Pictures are taken with long exposure times on light-sensitive colour photo paper. Included in the camera is a fiber-optic light-drawer, that traces the movements of the dancers. The final photo shows the different reactions from the different light sources on the photo paper.

In collaboration with Felix Pape, Agnes Storch and Veerle Vervliet.

villa Noailles

La villa Noailles art center in Hyères, southern France, promotes contemporary art, fashion, photography, design & interior design with a focus on emerging talents.
Its unique location, surronded by the Mediterranean, luxurious nature and precious colors & light, has been the starting point of the creation of its visual identity, translating these components into highly sun-concentrated graphics.

Printing Marks

Printing Marks is a wrapping paper designed for the bookstore of the french Centre National du Graphisme de Chaumont. the pattern is composed of a collection of colors print markers collected from industrial packaging.

Nebula

Nebula is an abstract illustration made in code. By using feedback loops and noise, digital textural moments are generated. I make those analog by intervening at the right time and pulling high quality prints from it. ✌️

Architecture du Nouveau Réalisme

This book tries to depict the future of museums trough multiple projects of transformation of the Museum of Art and History of Geneva. Each designer presents a new energetic and climatic influence on architectural reflection and evolution. Colours intervene as a visual cue to navigate the three chapters (light, humidity and heat) in which the projects are organised.
Photographs by © HEAD Micheal Giesbrecht

Hope Soon

This series was designed as an investigation of my relationship with control versus surrender. A series of life events left me feeling out of control. My process: experimental methodologies in material explorations, layout techniques, and “blind” elements that create chance outcomes. Chance methodologies can produce unexpected results, which are integrated with both analog and digital techniques.