Forgive me, forgive me, but I'm going to start this post with a moan. Why is it that organisations like to tinker around with what they're giving you, dress it up as 'making the user experience a whole lot better', and in the process make life ten times more exasperating? And then refuse to listen to you when you question what they're doing?
I logged on to my bank account yesterday morning to make a payment - to a new supplier. A few clicks of the button should do the trick. But, oh no. The service has been upgraded and I can't do that any more. Now I'm told I have to phone a 'team' on a premium-rate number. Turns out, after spending an hour on the aforementioned premium rate number, that my account is being 'migrated' and in future I'll need a card reader to carry out that transaction. Except they can't send me a card reader because my migration is still pending. Well, why don't you tell me that on your web site, NatWest Bank, instead of wasting an hour of my time? Oh, I see, it's to improve security. But what about my 'user experience': you'll pass my comments on to a 'customer care team' who will call me back within the next 48 hours. THANKS A BUNCH.
And so to TypePad - who have also 'improved' their service. Not for me, though TypePad: because the search tool is no longer available to some users. THANKS A BUNCH.
Because, you know what? I'd really like to use that search tool. Why? Because I want to mention Matthew Carter in this post (when I get around to starting it), and I know I've mentioned him before on this blog - but I can't remember when. Easy to find with a search tool. But without, I'd have to go back and read every post I've ever written in order to find it. THANKS A BUNCH.
But of course, NatWest Bank and TypePad don't read this blog, do they? No, they're too busy 'improving' their services. THANKS A BUNCH.
So, sorry to put you through that lot, dear reader. At least I feel a bit better now. And so, on to the real stuff: the 52 fonts and the letter S. And, once again, I'm spoilt for choice.
Ah, that's better already, isn't it? Sabon: designed by the great, the one-and-only, Jan Tschichold. And I must say that I was tickled by the description of Tschichold on the Textism site: 'a shit-disturber of the highest order'.
Tschichold designed Sabon in 1964, and it was produced jointly by
three foundries: D. Stempel AG, Linotype and Monotype. This was in
response to a request from German master printers to make a font family
that was the same design for the three metal type technologies of the
time: foundry type for hand composition, linecasting, and single-type
machine composition. Tschichold turned to the sixteenth century for
inspiration, and the story has a complicated family thread that
connects his Sabon design to the Garamond lineage.
Jakob Sabon,
who the type is named for, was a student of the great French
punchcutter Claude Garamond. He completed a set of his teacher's
punches after Garamond's death in 1561. Sabon became owner of a German
foundry when he married the granddaughter of the Frankfurt printer,
Christian Egenolff. Sabon died in 1580, and his widow married Konrad
Berner, who took over the foundry. Tschichold loosely based his design
on types from the 1592 specimen sheet issued by the Egenolff-Berner
foundry: a 14-point roman attributed to Claude Garamond, and an italic
attributed to Robert Granjon. Sabon was the typeface name chosen for
this twentieth-century revival and joint venture in production; this
name avoided confusion with other fonts connected with the names of
Garamond and Granjon.
A beautiful, beautiful font. Use it wherever and whenever you can.
And love them or loathe them, but every designer really needs to have a script face up his sleeve for use in emergency situations. Put your money on Snell Roundhand.
It was designed in 1965 by Matthew Carter.
Conception and design were both based on 18th century round hand
scripts. The font has an elegant and festive feel and its capitals can
also be used as initials mixed with other alphabets. Or so it says here.
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