191446
Published: 30th April, 2024
Last edited: 26th April, 2013
Created: 26th April, 2013
Permutation: The act of changing the arrangement of a given number of elements.
One font, two different brick combinations.
Picking any two bricks from the 169 available gives a total possible combinations of 14196 (169C2) different fonts. Counting a certain kinds of bricks as one--all four 45degree, for instance--gives 36 unique bricks, resulting in 630 (36C2) unique combinations or fonts.
In this font, if the bricks are swapped with each other, the result will be a different font. Hence order of the bricks matter. In which case, nCr (combinations) is not the right choice. What's needed is nPr (permutations). 169P2 gives 28392 permutations and a 36P2 gives 1260 permutations.
So, at a minimum, 1260 fonts are possible with the current implementation of FontStruct, with just this particular layout of bricks.
103139135
Published: 24th September, 2011
Last edited: 21st July, 2014
Created: 11th September, 2011
Based on the logo for http://www.thememagazine.com/.This is a clone
9661417263
Published: 10th August, 2008
Last edited: 24th June, 2009
Created: 10th August, 2008
this electricity
injected into me
emotions running over me
and when you're getting close
you touch my innermost
a feeling deep inside me knows
—"circuit breaker", röyksopp
I gave up working on this font last year because it looked ugly. Then I found it a few days ago and somehow it turned into this presentable form. Hope you like it.
However, the curves are quite faceted as I don't have the patience of other more accomplished fontstructors here. I wish I did.
It looks quite simple, and in the end, it was, though getting to the end was anything but. This font appears as a clone of ookii because that's where I started it, thinking I'll just add the shadows. Getting the shadows to look natural and line up properly in every character was a geometric challenge. I ended up redrawing the whole thing three times over--in incremental step up of scale before getting it right. I love doing fonts like this one.This is a clone
123484
Published: 12th March, 2013
Last edited: 24th March, 2013
Created: 12th March, 2013
Looking at fs SHŌGUN, it occured to me that it might just be doable in 2×3-ish grid. At 1.3 filter setting, it almost was. I couldn't figure out how to do a 1/8th center square, hence the holes. No big deal, just an experiment.
144885
Published: 20th October, 2013
Last edited: 20th October, 2013
Created: 20th October, 2013
This is nothing special, but don't go by the Created and Last Edit time stamps. I've been working on this for an inordinately long time. The glyphs were just copy-pasted from the original working fs on to this.
The amount of variations this fs went through could have produced at least three additional fses. They got lost over the refinement process.
110118620
Published: 21st February, 2015
Last edited: 22nd February, 2015
Created: 18th February, 2015
Every (almost) glyph has a matching pair, rotated, mirrored or otherwise. Some are quite forced.
7798734
Published: 31st May, 2010
Last edited: 1st June, 2010
Created: 29th May, 2010
Another stencil font...with obvious influences from Glaser Stencil (because I love it so!). But to be fair, Glaser Stencil was not referenced even once in the making of this fontstruction.
Allow me to wax technical about FontStruct 2.0 for a bit. A lot of my fontstructions have been even thickness all around. However, the evenness have been approximated thus far—not so anymore. First there were the 45° bricks; then came the 26.57°/63.43° bricks. With the 2.0 Make Composite feature, 14.04°/75.96° angles became possible. These two additional angles provide a finer tune of thickness of stems. The preview does not do justice to the font, but I tested the thicknesses of stems in Illustrator—horizontals/verticals/diagonals. Each stem now is as close in thickness to other as possible. This really is an even stroke font[struction]. Other 2.0 features are also used (but may not be obvious at a glance). See that 'o'? That's just one quarter curve created and then rotated three additional times. Very handy. The horizontal and vertical flips were used extensively throughout the creation process. Quarter-ing of angled bricks became necessary when it became evident that the only even thickness of a stroke is possible at x.5 thickness when combined with a curve. This meant that each vertical/horizontal stem is 5.5 bricks thick, which in turn made it necessary to use angled bricks at a quarter scale, which, of course, was made possible with the Make Composite feature. The only place I couldn't get the brick I wanted was in 4 (zoom in to see the slight misshape). It was a joy to work on this fontstruction to get what I really wanted almost every time. Great update, Rob. Cheers!
As long as I am on the soap box: What's up with diaeresis? I understand the reason for their existence, but are they the best possible way to handle various additional sounds? Also, are they even necessary? For example, café in French means a particular thing. But does cafe (without the e with the grave on it) mean something else? If not, wouldn't the French automatically know how to properly pronounce café (with or without acute on the e) the correct way whichever 'e' is used? It helps in the pronunciation for the uninitiated but are languages really designed for the novice? There are 26 letters in the English alphabet but they cover the gamut of up to 44 different sounds (according to some). Improbable as it may seem, it does not stop people to choose the correct pronunciation of letters. Hop has one sound for the 'o' and adding an 'e' at the end does not add the 'e' sound at the end of 'hop' but changes the sound of the middle 'o'. Convention. Sure. What I am trying to get at is that written script functions much better with distinct shapes without the flow-interrupting addition of the diaeresis. So unless there are two words spelled the same with the only difference being the kind of diacritic on the letters, the diacritic are redundant, no? If there is a real need for certain letter+diacritic combo, wouldn't a new shape be better? There are no shortage of additional shapes in the scripts of other languages. Can't do without an 'é'? Replace it with, say, 'ө' from the Greek script...or whatever. It bears repetition: What's up with diaeresis?
129544
Published: 27th April, 2012
Last edited: 13th August, 2020
Created: 27th April, 2012
I going to attempt to build this live. Please comment and help me make it better. Suggestions welcome.This is a clone
284114036
Published: 28th October, 2008
Last edited: 24th June, 2009
Created: 18th October, 2008
Further exploration of the...this...style of type design. I was going to do the uppercase but then I realized that I wasn't. Go figure.
1445837
Published: 6th September, 2008
Last edited: 16th June, 2009
Created: 6th September, 2008
Synergy of two, energy go wild See the stars align to spell our name out in the sky —"Circuit Breaker", Röyksopp
13773439205
Published: 16th January, 2009
Last edited: 11th May, 2011
Created: 15th January, 2009
Lay The I Flat on top of this to fill in the missing parts.