Damon Styer on FontFeed
Posted in: art, Design, Fonts, resource, typographyWatch this great piece on sign painter /typophile Damon Styer on FontFeed. (via designdetox)
Watch this great piece on sign painter /typophile Damon Styer on FontFeed. (via designdetox)
Belgian graphic designer and old class mate Tom Tosseyn has relaunched his site showcasing his work across fashion, apparel and music. Dig in!
I recently watched this film, and while I have mixed feelings about the film itself, the title blew me away. Made by SFAUSTINA Design last year, it’s a typographical feast for the eyes. Some of the type compositions are reminiscent of the golden era of Hollywood in the 1940s (see above, where director’s name, film title, and main actor’s name appear on the same screen). The animation of the type hints at the key visual device that runs throughout the film (lights and reflections), which in turn relates a key element in the story. Catch the full interview with Stephen Faustina and watch the titles in HD, here.
Vanessa Marzaroli directs the music video for Lilac Wine by The Cinematic Orchestra.
TRISEC experiment fonts were born from the first collaboration between Sorin Bechira and Stefan Romanu; Basic, Metallic, Organic and Conservateur are all gorgeous.
Prologue’s treatment for Robin Hood is a study in patient analogue work. Ridley Scott called on the studio create Legends to open the film as well as End and Main Titles. Ridley’s vision for the film required Prologue to treat all the type in a handmade fashion, this meant taking the type out of the computer for most of the process and filming and treating them as handmade elements.
What stuck out to me were the gorgeous end titles that Prologue worked on in collaboration with Italian artist and animator, Gianluigi Toccafondo. I spoke with Prologue’s Creative Director on the project, Henry Hobson about their process for type development for the film and how they worked in collaboration with Toccafondo, here is what he had to say:
The type development was key to our work at Prologue, our idea was to echo Tocafondos effect with our typography. Initially we worked with existing fonts but found them too limiting. So we created a complete custom serif typeface to evoke the adventure, romance, promise, mystery qualities of the movie. We printed out each credit, then hand inked each name, working in 4k meant we could really go to town with really fine details. Manija Emran, one of our typographers, then added amazingly intricate custom flourishes to each letter, not just a full alphabet, but also every single character had its own custom flourish, to produce a truly unique type treatment. Even the locator cards had more love poured into them than most title sequences. During the end credits we printed our comped name cards onto non-porous paper then smudged and distorted by hand each name a dozen times, to produce a living hold and hand made transitions. Principally animated by Georgia Tribuiani, the smudged elements really integrated and transitioned the type into a constantly shifting and flowing sequence.
As a side note, when I was browsing through Prologue’s recent list of work one thing began to become apparent to me, their role in film production has evolved. Prologue was once called upon to vignette a film’s story with their personal treatment as a means to both draw the audience into the story as well as leave them with a final impression of the film. Now it seems that Prologue is called upon to envelope the film with a design system that ties the whole world together. Robin Hood, along with Iron Man 2, Sherlock Holmes and Ninja Assassin, are cases of Prologue’s further involvement with establishing a graphic style for a film.
Click here for the full interview as well as the clips
Director – Ridley Scott
Animated illustration -Gianluigi Toccafonda
Creative Director & Design – Henry Hobson
Producer – Unjoo Lee Byars
Typographic Design & Illustration – Manija Emran
Animators – Jorge Almeida, Cris Kong, Georgia Tribuiani, Stephen Villari
Executive Producer – Kyle Cooper
Delicious motion graphics, funky beats and bubble gum rockabilly…
Imaginary Forces lend their hand on telling the story of one of this years most highly anticipated titles God of War III. 01. main title / 02. flashback cinematics
I mean, what can you say about IdN? They really are always ruling hard. I could not figure out what to post from the stuff that they have up right now, so I figured I would just link to it in general. It just all looks incredible. They are always awesome at discovering talent that […]