London Reconnections: A Typeface for the Underground

A wonderfully engaging history of Johnston Underground.

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How to create a typographic hierarchy – Pangram Pangram Foundry

  1. Start with the text
  2. Use size intentionally
  3. Contrast weights and styles
  4. Play with spacing
  5. Use colour, but don’t rely on it
  6. Limit your font choices (but choose well and wisely)
  7. Repeat, repeat, repeat
  8. Test your system

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Matthias Ott – Painting With the Web – beyond tellerrand Düsseldorf 20025 - YouTube

A great talk by Matthias on what you can do with web standards today!

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Citywide – Jason Santa Maria

A fun new font from Jason:

Citywide is a sans serif family inspired by mid-1900s bus and train destination roll signs.

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The hardest working font in Manhattan – Aresluna

This is absolutely wonderful!

There’s deep dives and then there’s Marcin’s deeeeeeep dives. Sit back and enjoy this wholesome detective work, all beautifully presented with lovely interactive elements.

This is what the web is for!

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Introducing TODS – a typographic and OpenType default stylesheet | Clagnut by Richard Rutter

This is a very handy piece of work by Rich:

The idea is to set sensible typographic defaults for use on prose (a column of text), making particular use of the font features provided by OpenType. The main principle is that it can be used as starting point for all projects, so doesn’t include design-specific aspects such as font choice, type scale or layout (including how you might like to set the line-length).

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An nth-letter selector in CSS

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Variable fonts

The future of typography is here.

Billboards and Novels by Jon Tan

Liveblogging Jon’s talk at An Event Apart in Atlanta.