What’s Your Type

Next month, Gotham Books is releasing the paperback edition of its very entertaining title Just My Type by Simon Garfield. To promote the release, Gotham Books has posted this cool poster of “The Periodic Table of Typeface”.

Here’s what Garfield had to say about his book:

“Just My Type is a book of stories about fonts. It examines how Helvetica and Comic Sans took over the world. It explains why we are still influenced by type choices made more than 500 years ago, and why the T in the Beatles logo is longer than the other letters. It profiles the great originators of type, from Baskerville to Zapf, as well as people like Neville Brody who threw out the rulebook. The book is about that pivotal moment when fonts left the world of Letraset and were loaded onto computers, and typefaces became something we realized we all have an opinion about. And beyond all this, the book reveals what may be the very best and worst fonts in the world – and what your choice of font says about you.

Today we can imagine no simpler everyday artistic freedom than the pull-down font menu. Here is the spill of history, the echo of Johann Gutenberg with every key tap. Here are names we recognize: Helvetica, Times New Roman, Palatino and Gill Sans. Here are the names from folios and flaking manuscripts: Bembo, Baskerville and Caslon. Here are possibilities for flair: Bodoni, Didot and Book Antiqua. And here are the risks of ridicule: Brush Script, Herculanum, Braggadocio and Comic Sans. Twenty years ago we hardly knew them, but now we all have favourites. Computers have rendered us all gods of type, a privilege we could never have anticipated in the age of the typewriter.

Yet when we choose Calibri over Century, or the designer of an advertisement picks Centaur rather than American Gothic, what lies behind our choice and what impression do we hope to create? When we choose a typeface, what are we really saying? Who makes these fonts and how do they work? And just why do we need so many? What are we to do with Alligators, Accolade, Amigo, Alpha Charlie, Acid Queen, Arbuckle, Art Gallery, Ashley Crawford, Arnold Bocklin, Auriol Vignette Sylvie, Andreena, Amorpheus, Angry, and Anytime Now? Banjoman, Bannikova, Baylac, Binner, Bingo, Blacklight, Blippo, Bebedot Blonde, Beach House or Bubble Bath? (And how lovely does Bubble Bath sound, with its thin floating linked circles ready to pop and dampen the page?) There are more than 100,000 fonts in the world. But why can’t we keep to a half-dozen or so familiar faces? Or perhaps we should just stick to the classic Garamond, named after the type designer Claude Garamond, active in Paris in the first half of the sixteenth century, whose highly legible Roman type blew away the heavy fustiness of his German predecessors, and later, adapted by William Caslon in England, would provide the letters for the American Declaration of Independence.

Typefaces are now 560 years old. So when a Brit called Matthew Carter constructed the now-ubiquitous Verdana on his computer in the 1990s, what could he possibly be doing to an A and a B that had never been done before? And how did a friend of his make the typeface Gotham, which eased Barack Obama into the Presidency? And what exactly makes a font presidential or American, or British, French German, Swiss or Jewish? These are arcane mysteries and it is the job of the book to get to the heart of them. But it begins with a cautionary tale, a story of what happens when a typeface gets out of control.”

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How They Do That

Do you ever pass some amazing street art and wonder how it was created? Well, even if you never thought about it, here are some examples of amazing street art that has been popping-up around the globe in recent months. If you have some of your own favorites, pass then along and we’ll post them on Travel Between The Pages.

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Sometimes Paris

Sometimes Paris feels just like this…

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The Joy of Maps

lorenagarcia.es

biancatschaiker.com

Juan Martin Rojas

phillippedebongnie.be

johngibsonNY.com

Nadia Guillemin

James Orndorf roughshelter.com

abigaldaker.com

janedixon.com

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Cruising Biblical Style

Last year the blogosphere was all abuzz with reports that Dutchman Johan Huibers was building a replica of Noah’s Ark and that he planned to sail it to London for the Olympics. Well, the Olympics have arrived, but the Ark is still safely docked in the Netherlands.

Huibers may not be setting sail for Great Britain just yet, but he has opened up the Ark to visitors. For the fee of just €12.50 you can tour the massive boat and visit with the builders. The 50 cubit by 30 cubit by 300 cubit vessel is even stocked with life-sized replicas of animals and Noah’s family.

Huibers began his project 20 years ago as an act of faith rather than a response to global warming. Although the Ark may come in handy in the near future. The Ark cost $1.6 million to build, stands four stories high, is longer than an American football field and is more than 30 meters wide. The outer frame of the boat is built of pine, but the vessel itself is actually constructed from old metal barge hulls.

If you’d like to visit, the Ark is berthed in Dordrecht, just a few kilometers southeast of Rotterdam.

Posted in Architecture, Europe, Tourism | 2 Comments

Literature By The Pound

When I was in Madrid earlier this year, I visited many antiquarian and secondhand book stores, but some how I missed La Casqueria, Libros al Peso. Situated in the recently renovated Mercado de San Fernando in the up and coming Lavapies neighborhood, the book shop has been getting quite a bit of attention for their policy of selling all of their secondhand book at the flat rate of €10 per kilo. With the Euro hovering near the $1.20 exchange rate, $6 a pound for most titles is a real bargain.

Mercado de San Fernando is located at Calle de Embajadores 41 not far from the Lavapies Metro station.

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aMAZEme London

Inspired by a mutual love for the work of Argentinian writer Jorge Luis Borges, Brazilian artists Marcos Saboya and Gualter Pupo have created aMAZEme at London’s Southbank Centre. Constructed with more than 250,000 books by dozens of volunteers, the labyrinth, which is shaped in the form of Borges’ fingerprint, invites participants to wander through the installation.

The maze, which will stand until August 26th, can be visited at the aMAZEme Facebook page.

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Fire Rainbow

photo from Ken Rotberg, Delray Beach, Florida

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Guarding the Museum

I am always intrigued by the urban art “interventions” of the Spanish art performance collective Luzinterruptus. Their latest piece titled “Plastic Garbage Guarding the Museum” is a large scale installation consisting of thousands of multicolored plastic shopping bags inflated with air, internally lit and piled in dumpsters.

The work was commissioned by Winterthur, Switzerland‘s Gewerbemuseum to underscore the environmental impact of Europe’s conspicuous consumption as part of a series called “Oh, Plastiksack!”.

The inauguration of the piece last month included a street party where bag “balloons’ were distributed to be paraded through town.

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Yum, Airline Food

If you’re a travel geek, or just a glutton for punishment, you don’t want to miss out on the always entertaining website Airline Meals. Curated for over a decade by an anonymous website designer from Rotterdam, this curiously engaging website offers more than 25,000 photographs of airline meals from more than 600 different air carriers around the world. Along with the intriguing photos, the site also provides information on food in airport lounges, airport restaurant availability, a menu card archive and even behind the scenes reports on international airline catering companies.

Beyond the peculiar food offerings, my favorite aspects of Airline Meals are actually nonfood related. The site also has marvelous archives of historic airline advertisements and aviation related photographs from the 20th century.

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