While adding some weblogs to my blogroll, Â I came across one called Huge Type. Â I was intrigued. Â You can’t consider yourself a serious designer without some form of adoration for typography. Clicking on the site, I found it was an experiment / experience kind of thing. Further intrigued me.
Then I saw that this project / experiment incorporated the iPhone. (There again, who doesn’t love the iPhone?) And I thought, what a great, entertaining way to direct people’s attention to the sheer volume of outstanding typography – Â and its fantastic craftsmanship – that surrounds us daily, to the point of viewer non-chalance.
We see type so often – on magazines, buses, billboards, our computers, our books – we use it to write with, design with, read with – that typefaces run great risk of being taken for granted. Â They’re just “there”, they show up, they look good or bad.
Alot of people aren’t all that aware of the important role played by type. Â But it is an amazingly important, critical part of any visual layout. Â One word can evoke entirely different feelings based on what font is used to say it. Â That’s pretty powerful.
So, while I’m at it, kudos to all the font designers out there, who painstakingly render their works of typographical art. Â Thank you to the type design greats of history, and the modern font artists who carry on a strong tradition of skilled mastery.
Well I got off on a bit of a tangent there – but well worth it, if it reminds people of the expressiveness possible through the use of type and a gathers a little appreciation for the unsung heros of typography. Â (We all know of Leonardo DaVinci and Frank Lloyd Wright, but how many know Giambattista Bodoni?)
So, take a look at this site if you’re interested in combining the iPhone and a little fun with type. Â You may start seeing letters and words in a whole new way. Â http://www.hugetype.com/