Higgins Calendar

Page 1

20 14 Changes Typography

Calendar



20 14

Typography

Calendar



January


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

3031 Thursday

Friday

1 2 3 Monday

Tuesday

6 7


20 5 14

January Saturday

Sunday

4

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

8 9 10

Saturday

Sunday

11 12


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

13 14 Thursday

Friday

1516 17 Monday

Tuesday

2021


20 18 19 14

January Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

222324 Saturday

Sunday

25 26


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

2728 Thursday

Friday

29 3031 Notes


1

20 214

January Saturday

Sunday

1

Franklin Gothic | Designer: Morris Fuller Benton

Franklin Gothic, one of the most popular sans serif types ever produced, was designed by Morris Fuller Benton in 1902 for American Type Founders. In 1979, under license with ATF, Vic Caruso began work on more weights of the design for ITC. This version adheres closely to the subtle thick and thin pattern of the original design; the slightly enlarged x-height and condensed proportions of the new version result in greater economy of space. This typeface is a standard choice for use in newspapers and advertising. In 1991, David Berlow completed the family for ITC by creating compressed and condensed weights. ITC Franklin Gothic Compressed is designed especially to solve impossibly tight copyfitting problems, while maintaining high legibility standards. ITC Franklin Condensed provides medium weights of narrow proportions. It is frequently seen in newspapers, advertisements, posters, and anyplace with space restrictions.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789 Morris Fuller Benton is accredited with being the most prolific type designer in American history, with an output twice

Morris Benton 1872–1948 USA

as great as that of Frederic Goudy (although in fairness Goudy did not start his career until a later age). A factor in his relative anonymity was his position as an in-house designer, but in a position that suited his retiring character: when pressed he would put his successes down to ‘Lady Luck’. Benton has been credited with inventing the concept of the type family and although this is not the case he did do his best work expanding faces into families and adapting existing type styles for ATF. Between 1900 and 1928 he designed 18 variations on Century, including the popular Century Schoolbook.



Febraury


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

27 28

Thursday

Friday

29 30 31 Monday

Tuesday

3 4


1

20 2 14

February Saturday

Sunday

1

Wednesday

Saturday

Thursday

Friday

5 6 7 Sunday

8

9


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

10 11

Thursday

Friday

12 13 14 Monday

Tuesday

17 18


20 15 16 14

February Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

19 20 21

Saturday

Sunday

22 23


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

24 25

Thursday

Friday

26 27 28 Notes


5 February Saturday

Sunday

1

20 2 14

Adobe Caslon Pro | Designer: Original: William Caslon

Revival: Carol Twombly (See November)

William Caslon released his first typefaces in 1722. Caslon’s types were based on seventeenth-century Dutch old style

designs, which were then used extensively in England. Because of their remarkable practicality, Caslon’s designs met with

instant success. Caslon’s types became popular throughout Europe and the American colonies; printer Benjamin Franklin hardly used any other typeface. The first printings of the American Declaration of Independence and the Constitution

were set in Caslon. For her Caslon revival, designer Carol Twombly studied specimen pages printed by William Caslon

between 1734 and 1770. The OpenType Pro version merges formerly separate fonts (expert, etc.), and adds both central

European language support and several additional ligatures. Ideally suited for text in sizes ranging from 6- to 14-point, Adobe Caslon Pro is the right choice for magazines, journals, book publishing, and corporate communications.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789

William Caslon I was the first British typefounder of any renown and was responsible for ending the dependence of British printers on imported Dutch types which (with some French types) had dominated the market throughout the 17th century. Born in Worcestershire, William Caslon began his career in London engraving

William Calson 1692-1766 GB

and chasing gun barrels (occasionally also cutting brass letters for bookbinders) until a printer called William Bowyer, after seeing some of his letters, encouraged him to try punch-cutting. Bowyer lent him €500 to start his own foundry, which he opened in London’s Vine Street probably in 1722 or 1723. In 1734 the foundry moved to Chiswell Street, where Caslon published his famous specimen sheet showing a full range of the roman types he cut. His work found particular favour in America, and Caslon type was used by Mary Katherine Goddard of Baltimore for printing the Declaration of Independence.



March


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

24 25 Thursday

Friday

26 2728 Monday

Tuesday

3 4


20 214

5 March Saturday

Sunday

1

Wednesday

Saturday

Thursday

Friday

5 6 7 Sunday

8 9


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

10 11 Thursday

Friday

12 1314 Monday

Tuesday

17 18


20 15 1614

1 March Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

1920 21

Saturday

Sunday

22 23


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

24 25 Thursday

Friday

26 2728 Monday

31

Notes


20 8 29 3014 March Saturday

Sunday

Helvetica Neue | Designer: Original: Max Miedinger,

Revival: D. Stempel AG

The history of Helvetica includes a number of twists and turns. There are, in fact, two versions of Helvetica. The first one is the original design, which was created by Max Miedinger and released by Linotype in 1957. And secondly, in 1983, D. Stempel AG, Linotype’s daughter company, released the Neue Helvetica®

design, which was a re-working of the 1957 original. The outcome was a synthesis of aesthetic and technical refinements and modific ations that resulted in improved appearance, legibility and usefulness.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789 Max Miedinger, born in Zurich, was an in-house designer with the Haas foundry in Munchenstein, Switzerland. His most famous typeface is Helvetica, currently one of the most widely used sans serifs, which was designed in 1956. Edward Hoffman of Haas had asked Miedinger to adapt the existing Haas Grotesk to bring it in line with current taste. Haas Grotesk had its origins in the 19th-century German grotesques like Berthold’s Akzidenz-Grotesk. The type, which was created from Miedinger’s

Max Miedinger 1910–1980 CH

china-ink drawings, seemed like a new design in its own right, rather than an old one with minor retouching as had been the original plan. Although designed for the home market, the then-called Neue Haas Grotesk proved popluar farther afield. When Stempel AG in Germany released the face in 1961 they called it Helvetica, the traditional Latin name for Switzerland, in order to capitalize on the fashion for Swiss typography. Additional weights were added to the Helvetica family over the years. In 1983 Linotype released a new, more extensive version, Neue Helvetica, in 51 weights.



April


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

30 1 Thursday

Friday

2 3 4 Monday

Tuesday

7 8


1 April Saturday

Sunday

5

Wednesday

20 6 14

Thursday

Friday

910 11

Saturday

Sunday

12 13


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

14 15

Thursday

Friday

16 17 18 Monday

Tuesday

2122


20 19 20 14

April Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

2324 25 Saturday

Sunday

26 27


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

2829 Thursday

Friday

30 1 2 Notes


April Saturday

Sunday

3

20 4 14

Century Gothic | Designer: Sol Hess

Friday

Century Gothic Regular fonts maintains the basic design of 20th Century but has an enlarged ‘x’ height and has been modified to ensure satisfactory output from modern digital systems. A design based on 20th Century, which was drawn by Sol Hess between 1936 and 1947. The Century Gothic Fonts Regular design is influenced by the geometric style sans serif faces which were popular during the 1920’s and 30’s. Century Gothic Fonts Regular is useful for headlines and general display work and for small quantities of text, particularly in advertising.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789 Sol Hess 1886–1953 USA

For 50 Years Sol Hess was art director of Lanston Monotype Machinery Co., where he succeeded his friend and collaborator F W Goudy. He started with the company in 1902 after a three-year scholarship couse at Pennsylvania Museum School of Industrial Art, and as a type designer there he redrew and readapted all their typographical materials. His forte was the development of type families, and during his years with Lanston monotype he carried out commissions for many leading American companies, including Curtis Publishing, Crowell-Collier, Sears Roebuck, Montgomery Ward, Yale University Press and World Publishing Company.



May


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

27 28

Thursday

Friday

29 1 2 Monday

Tuesday

5 6


2

May Saturday

Sunday

3

Wednesday

Saturday

20 4 14

Thursday

Friday

7 8 9 Sunday

10 11


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

12 13

Thursday

Friday

14 15 16 Monday

Tuesday

19 20


3 May

20 17 18 14

Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

21 22 23

Saturday

Sunday

24 25


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

26 27

Thursday

Friday

28 29 30 Notes


May Saturday

Sunday

31

Gill Sans MT | Designer: Eric Gill

20 1 14

Designed by Eric Gill and released by the Monotype Corporation between 1928 and 1930, Gill Sans is based on the typeface Edward Johnston, the innovative British letterer and teacher, designed in 1916 for the signage of the London Underground. Gill’s alphabet is more classical in proportion and contains his signature flared capital R and eyeglass lowercase g. With distinct roots in pen-written letters, Gill Sans is classified as a humanist sans serif, making it very legible and readable in text and display work.The condensed, bold, and display versions are excellent for packaging or posters.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789 Arthur Eric Rowton Gill, letter-cutter, sculptor, wood-engraver and type designer, was one of the most prominent and controversial figures of his day. Born in Brighton, Gill studied at Chichester School of Art before being apprenticed to an ecclesiastical architect in London. Whilst there he attended the classes of the calligrapher Edward Johnston at the Central School of Arts and Crafts. Thus he became involved in the small world of scribes and illuminators and the Arts and Crafts Movement, embarking on a career as a stone

Eric Gill 1882–1940 GB

cutter and letterer. Gill designed his first typeface at the invitation of Stanley Morison of the Monotype Corporation. The drawings for the type, Perpetua, were begun in 1925. Gill Sans, designed during the same period, was based on the same sources as the Johnston Sans Serif. Gill had painted san-serif lettering on the Douglas Cleverdon’s Bristol Bookshop in 1927 and it was this that suggested the idea of a Gill sans serif to Morison. Joanna was cut by the Caslon foundry; one of its first uses in 1931 was for Gill’s own Essay on Typography. These three typefaces are from his most creative period.



June


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

26 27

Thursday

Friday

28 29 30 Monday

Tuesday

2 3


June Saturday

31

Wednesday

Saturday

Sunday

Thursday

20 114 Friday

4 5 6 Sunday

7

8


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

9 10

Thursday

Friday

11 12 13 Monday

Tuesday

16 17


3

June Saturday

14

Wednesday

20 1514

Sunday

Thursday

Friday

18 19 20

Saturday

Sunday

21 22


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

23 24

Thursday

Friday

25 26 27 Monday

30

Notes


20 28 2914

June Saturday

Minion Pro |

Sunday

Designer: Robert Slimbach

Minion Pro is an Adobe Original typeface designed by Robert Slimbach. The first version of Minion was released in 1990. Cyrillic additions were released in 1992, and finally the OpenType Pro version was released in 2000. Minion Pro is inspired by classical, old style typefaces of the late Renaissance, a period of elegant, beautiful, and highly readable type designs. Minion Pro combines the aesthetic and functional qualities that make text type highly readable with the versatility of OpenType digital technology, yielding unprecedented flexibility and typographic control, whether for lengthy text or display settings. The full Minion Pro family contains three weights and two widths, each with optical size variants, and each supporting a full range of Western languages, including Greek and Cyrillic. With its many ligatures, small caps, oldstyle figures, swashes, and other added glyphs, Minion Pro is ideal for uses ranging from limited-edition books to newsletters to packaging.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789 Robert Slimbach, who was born in Evanston, Illinois, received his training and early experience of type design

Robert Slimbach b. 1956 USA

in the drawing office of Autologic in California. In 1987, after two years of self-employment, which saw him contribute ITC Slimbach and ITC Giovanni to the International Typeface Corporation, he joined Adobe Systems. Since then, he has been designing and developing typefaces for the Adobe Originals program. Slimbach’s typefaces offer type users a rich palette of designs, mostly for text use, based on his enthusiasm for classic letter forms. In 1999 he received the Prix Charles Peignot from the Association Typographique Internationale for excellence in type design.



July


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

30 1

Thursday

Friday

2 3 4 Monday

Tuesday

7 8


1 July

Sunday

4

Thursday

Saturday

5

Wednesday

Saturday

20 614 Friday

9 10 11 Sunday

12 13


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

14 15

Thursday

Friday

16 17 18 Monday

Tuesday

21 22


5

20 19 2014

July Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

2 23 24 25 Saturday

Sunday

26 27


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

28 29

Thursday

Friday

30 31 1 Notes

Notes


1

July Saturday

Sunday

2

20 314

Perpetua | Designer: Eric Gill (See May)

Type designer Eric Gill’s most popular Roman typeface is Perpetua, which was released by the Monotype Corporation between 1925 and 1932. It first appeared in a limited edition of the book The Passion of Perpetua and Felicity, for which the typeface was named. The italic form was originally called Felicity. Perpetua’s clean chiseled look recalls Gill’s stonecutting work and makes it an excellent text typeface, giving sparkle to long passages of text; the Perpetua capitals have beautiful, classical lines that make this one of the finest display alphabets available.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789



August


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

2829 Thursday

Friday

30 31 1 Monday

Tuesday

4 5


1

20 314

August Saturday

Sunday

2

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

6 7 8

Saturday

Sunday

9 10


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

11 12 Thursday

Friday

13 14 15 Monday

Tuesday

18 19


2 August

20 5 16 1714 Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

20 21 22 Saturday

Sunday

23 24


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

2526 Thursday

Friday

27 28 29 Notes


20 30 3114

August Saturday

Sunday

Century Schoolbook |

Designer: Morris Benton (See January)

Another version of the Century family was produced when Ginn & Company, a textbook publisher, commissioned American Type Founders to design a typeface with maximum legibility. Morris Benton researched the subjects of eyesight and legibility, then created Century Schoolbook, which was released between 1918 and 1921. Century Schoolbook is still seen in elementary school texts, and can be used for text work where legibility is a primary consideration.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789



September


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

1 2

Thursday

Friday

3 4 5 Monday

Tuesday

8 9


2 September

5

Saturday

Sunday

6

Wednesday

Thursday

20 714 Friday

10 11 12

Saturday

Sunday

13 14


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

15 16

Thursday

Friday

17 18 19 Monday

Tuesday

22 23


20 20 2114

September Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

24 25 26

Saturday

Sunday

27 28


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

29 30

Thursday

Friday

1 2 3 Notes


3

20 514

September Saturday

Sunday

4

Adobe Garamond Pro | Designer: Original: Claude Garamond

Revival: Robert Slimbach (See June)

An Adobe Originals design, and Adobe’s first historical revival, Adobe Garamond is a digital interpretation of the roman types of Claude Garamond and the italic types of Robert Granjon. Since its release in 1989, Adobe Garamond has become a typographic staple throughout the world of desktop typography and design. Adobe type designer Robert Slimbach has captured the beauty and balance of the original Garamond typefaces while creating a typeface family that offers all the advantages of a contemporary digital type family. With the introduction of OpenType font technology, Adobe Garamond has been reissued as a Pro type family that takes advantage of OpenType’s advanced typographic capabilities. Now this elegant type family can be used with even greater efficiency and precision in OpenType-savvy applications such as Adobe InDesign.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789



October


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

29 30

Thursday

Friday

1 2 3 Monday

Tuesday

6 7


20 514

October Saturday

Sunday

4

Wednesday

Saturday

Thursday

Friday

8 9 10 Sunday

11 12


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

13 14

Thursday

Friday

15 16 17 Monday

Tuesday

20 21


20 18 1914

October Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

1 22 23 24 Saturday

Sunday

25 26


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

27 28

Thursday

Friday

29 30 31 Notes


20 214

October Saturday

Sunday

1

Goudy Old Style | Designer: Frederic Goudy

In 1915, Frederic W. Goudy designed Goudy Old Style, his twenty-fifth typeface, and his first for American Type Founders. Flexible enough for both text and display, it’s one of the most popular typefaces ever produced, frequently used for packaging and advertising. Its recognizable features include the diamond-shaped dots on i, j, and on punctuation marks; the upturned ear of the g; and the base of E and L. Several years later, in response to the overwhelming popularity of Cooper Black, Lanston Monotype commissioned Frederic W. Goudy to design heavy versions of Goudy Old Style. Goudy Heavyface and Goudy Heavyface Italic were released in 1925. The huge success of Goudy’s typefaces led to the addition of several weights to many of his typefaces; designers working for American Type Founders produced additions to the family. In 1927, Morris Fuller Benton drew Goudy Extra Bold.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789 Frederic Goudy, one of the best-known and most prolific of type designers, designed, by his own reckoning, 123 faces. Born in Bloomington, Illinois, he worked in various cities before founding the Booklet Press in Chicago in 1895 with equipment bought from Will Bradley. The sale of a set of

Frederic W. Goudy 1865–1947 USA

capitals of his own design to the Bruce Type Foundry, Boston, encouraged him to become a freelance lettering artist. Goudy’s breakthrough with type design came in 1911. He designed Kennerley Old Style for the publishers Mitchell Kennerley on the understanding that he could sell it to the trade. He set up the Village Letter Foundry to cast and sell Kennerley and a titling font, Forum. These established his reputation, and American Type Founders commissioned Goudy Old Style, regarded as one of his finest designs.



November


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

27 28

Thursday

Friday

29 30 31 Monday

Tuesday

3 4


1

20 214

November Saturday

Sunday

1

Wednesday

Saturday

Thursday

Friday

5 6 7 Sunday

8

9


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

10 11

Thursday

Friday

12 13 14 Monday

Tuesday

17 18


1 November

20 15 1614

Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

19 20 21

Saturday

Sunday

22 23


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

24 25 Thursday

Friday

26 27 28 Notes


20 29 3014

November Saturday

Sunday

Myriad Pro | Designers: Carol Twombly and Robert Slimbach (See June)

An Adobe Originals design first released in 1992, Myriad has become popular for both text and display composition. As an OpenType release, Myriad Pro expands this sans serif family to include Greek and Cyrillic glyphs, as well as adding oldstyle figures and improving support for Latin-based languages. The full Myriad Pro family includes condensed, normal, and extended widths in a full range of weights. Designed by Robert Slimbach & Carol Twombly with Fred Brady & Christopher Slye, Myriad has a warmth and readability that result from the humanistic treatment of letter proportions and design detail. Myriad Pro’s clean open shapes, precise letter fit, and extensive kerning pairs make this unified family of roman and italic an excellent choice for text typography that is comfortable to read, while the wide variety of weights and widths in the family provide a generous creative palette for even the most demanding display typography.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789 Carol Twombly studied design at the Rhode Island School of Design, where she became interested in type

Carol Twombly b. 1959 USA

design and typography. She received an MS from Stanford University in the graduate programme of digital typography under Charles Bigelow, and later joined the Bigelow & Holmes Studio. In the Morisawa Typeface Design Competition in 1984 she won first prize for Mirarae, a latin design which has since been licensed and released. A member of the Adobe type studio since 1988, Twombly has designed many successful display and text typefaces for the Adobe Originals library. In 1994 she was the first woman to receive from ATypI the Prix Charles Peignot for outstanding contributions to type design.



December


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

1 2

Thursday

Friday

3 4 5 Monday

Tuesday

8 9


20 714

December Saturday

Sunday

6

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

10 11 12

Saturday

Sunday

13 14


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

15 16

Thursday

Friday

17 18 19 Monday

Tuesday

22 23


20 20 2114

December Saturday

Sunday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

24 25 26

Saturday

Sunday

27 28


Monday

Wednesday

Tuesday

29 30

Thursday

Friday

31 1 2 Notes


20 414

December Saturday

Sunday

3

Bell MT | Designer: Richard Austin

In 1931 Monotype made this facsimile of the typeface cut originally for John Bell by Richard Austin in 1788, using as a basis the matrices in the possession of Stephenson Blake & Co. Used in Bell’s newspaper, “The Oracle,” it was regarded by Stanley Morison as the first English Modern face. Although inspired by French punchcutters of the time, with a vertical stress and fine hairlines, the face is less severe than the French models and is now classified as Transitional. Essentially a text face, Bell can be used for books, magazines, long articles etc.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz &0123456789 Born in London, RIchard Austin trained as a wood-engraver with Thomas Bewick. In 1788 he joined the British Letter Foundry of publisher John Bell as a punch-cutter. Influenced by Bell’s enthusiasm for

Richard Austin 1768–1830 GB

contemporary French types, Austin, a skillful cutter, produced a very sharply serifed letter which Stanley Morison was to call the first English modern face. the type retains some old-style characteristics and should more properly be called a late transitional. Austin went on to cut true moderns and later, in 1819, after starting a foundry of his own, he outlined the dangers of such designs being taken to extremes.


January

M

T

W

5 12 19 26

6 13 20 27

April M

T

6 13 20 27

7 14 21 28

7 14 21 28

T 1 8 15 22 29

F 2 9 16 23 30

S 3 10 17 24 31

S 4 11 18 25

W 1 8 15 22 29

T 2 9 16 23 30

F 3 10 17 24

S 4 11 18 25

S 5 12 19 26

February

M

T

W

T

F

S

2 9 16 23

3 10 17 24

4 11 18 25

5 12 19 26

6 13 20 27

7 14 21 28

S 1 8 15 22 29

S 2 9 16 23 30

S 3 10 17 24 31

May

M

T

W

T

4 11 18 25

5 12 19 26

6 13 20 27

7 14 21 28

F 1 8 15 22 29

W 1 8 15 22 29

T 2 9 16 23 30

F 3 10 17 24 31

S 4 11 18 25

S 5 12 19 26

T 1 8 15 22 29

F 2 9 16 23 30

S 3 10 17 24 31

S 4 11 18 25

July

M

T

6 13 20 27

7 14 21 28

October

M

T

W

5 12 19 26

6 13 20 27

7 14 21 28


March

M

T

W

T

F

S

2 9 16 23 30

3 10 17 24 31

4 11 18 25

5 12 19 26

6 13 20 27

7 14 21 28

S 1 8 15 22 29

W 3 10 17 24

T 4 11 18 25

F 5 12 19 26

S 6 13 20 27

S 7 14 21 28

June

M 1 8 15 22 29

T 2 9 16 23 30

August

M

T

W

3 10 17 24 31

4 11 18 25

5 12 19 26

T

F

6 13 20 27

7 14 21 28

S 1 8 15 22 29

S 2 9 16 23 30

November

20 15 September

M

7 14 21 28

T 1 8 15 22 29

W 2 9 16 23 30

T 3 10 17 24

F 4 11 18 25

S 5 12 19 26

S 6 13 20 27

F 4 11 18 25

S 5 12 19 26

S 6 13 20 27

December

M

T

W

T

F

S

2 9 16 23 30

3 10 17 24

4 11 18 25

5 12 19 26

6 13 20 27

7 14 21 28

S 1 8 15 22 29

M 7 14 21 28

T 1 8 15 22 29

W 2 9 16 23 30

T 3 10 17 24 31

Life is a series of natural and spontaneous changes. Don’t resist them – that only creates sorrow. Let reality be reality. Let things flow naturally foward in whatever way they like.

—Lao Tzu


References Typeface Histories

adobe.com itcfonts.com (Helvetica Neue) ascenderfonts.com (Century Gothic)

Typeface Designer Bios

An A-Z of Type Designers By Neil Macmillan

Designer Photos

Linotype Ascender Fonts (Bell) Identifont (Slimbach)

Title Page Images

Photography by Stephanie Higgins

Design Stephanie Higgins

Influences

Thinking withType by Ellen Lupton




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