Matlack

20
By Emily Heinz

description

process book for typeface by Emily Heinz

Transcript of Matlack

  • By Emily Heinz

  • 2012

    Anderson University, Anderson, SC

    Published by Emily Heinz

    Matlack created by Emily Heinz

  • Making Headlines 2

    Strategizing 4

    To Arms 11

    The Breakaway 13

    The Process 14

    Specimens 16

  • Aa Bb Cc Dd Ee Ff Gg

    Adobe Caslon Pro

    The quick, brown fox jumped over the lazy dog.

  • love of U.S. history drove my research to the era surrounding the American Revolution. After looking at several popular newspapers of the time including the Pennsylvania Gazette, the New-York Mercury, and the Massachusettes Centinel, it came to my attention that nearly all of the newspapers of the time printed their body text and most of their headers exclusively

    Matlacks purpose would be to serve as headers in brochures and on signage at historical sites pertaining to the American Revolution such as Colonial Williamsburg.

    in the typeface Caslon (as shown at the center left in the Boston News-Letter heading). Keeping this in mind, I wanted to design a distinct typeface that reflects the cause of the American Revolution while giving a nod to the type trend of the time. As with the current movement within the United States to retrurn to its roots and founding principles, I wanted to base my design on a traditional face.

  • Word lists and rough sketches from my Moleskin

  • began my brainstorming process by writing down anything that could be considered distinctly American in spirit. To aid in this process, I made lists of all the people, ideas, goals, and objects I could think of that are associated with the Revolution, which in turn lead to descriptive words. A few of these would included:

    military rigid, strict, straight, disciplined, genteel;quills, swords, bayonets long, slender, pointed, sharp. I also practiced copying Caslons characters so as to better understand their forms and their respective parts. This practice also allowed me to experiment with stroke and serif weights.

  • Aa Bb CcAdobe Caslon Pro

    Matlack

  • ust as we must look to the past in order that we might learn what course of action to take in the future, I thought it fitting to

    take a typeface that has played a significant role in American history and give it a slightly modern flare without deviating drastically in favor of the modern. Adobe Caslon Pro is a version of the classic typeface, developed in 1990 by Carol Twombly. It is based on the original specimens by William Caslon from 1734 to 1770. This became the the basis for Matlacks cap- and x-heights, and also served as the framework for my letterforms.

    Adobe Caslon Pro

    Matlack

  • Patrick Henry, 1775

  • he inspiration for Matlacks unique characteristics was derived from the conflict that arose during the American Revolution. Once ammunition ran low or ran out all together, options were either retreat or close range combat, the latter of which would be the bloody

    end to lives on both sides of the battle lines. In an effort to portray that kind of tension and disquietude,18thcentury swords and muskets with attatchable bayonets became the basis for the razor-sharp strokes. Splinter-point serifs replaced the blunt, slab-like serifs of Caslon.

  • From The Declaration of Independence, 1776

  • When in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands that have connected them with another and to assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which the Laws of Nature and of Natures God entitle them, a decent respect to the opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the separation.

    Just as the American colonies broke away from their mother country, I chose to incorporate the idea of division into Matlacks characters. By breaking a single stroke off of the main body of the letterform or creating a gap in a continuous stroke, I implied the severed ties between England and the states. Again, the sharp, pointed edges of the broken strokes create tension and suggest a violent separation.

  • Keeping all the aforementioned studies and details in mind, I set to work in order to create a highly emblematic set of characters. Each letterform went through a specific process from Moleskin sketch to vector character so as to establish a cohesive and united set.

  • original 1754 political cartoonby Benjamin Franklin