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Hello
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Type, signs and letters are
everywhere around us.
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From the first moment we wake up and
look at our watch
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to the last moment of the day when
we read books or magazines
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we are surrounded by letters.
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According to a research from 2004
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we are confronted with
5,000 messages a day
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that is a message every 12 seconds,
in some form or another,
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digital or analogue.
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All these message have some
emotional impact upon us.
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All these letter had to be designed,
and this is what this talk is about.
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People, or homo sapiens, have been using
speech for over 80,000 years.
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The history of written messages is only
a tiny fraction of history of language.
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The oldest written records
are about 5,000 old.
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So it is clear that writing is not really
necessary for human communication.
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We can live perfectly fine without type.
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Type can materialise language.
It allows communication across time.
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Writing allows incredible advantages
to human communication.
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Type works very similarly to human voice.
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Just like some voices can communicate
more effectively than others,
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some typefaces, too, can communicate
some messages better than other type.
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We can recognise human voices even
when distorted by a bad phone line.
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Type has the same identification value.
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Type identifies content,
and fills it with emotion.
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I'm one of of those
people who design type.
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Today's age is more complex than
anytime before, therefore
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type reflects requirements
of the time we live in.
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This is one of the reasons why
new typefaces are still designed.
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For example, messages today
are more hierarchical, so type designers
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design typefaces that allow
working with complex content.
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When I talk about type, I don't
only mean Latin writing script.
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Typefaces which I design support
over 250 languages,
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in various writing scripts.
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The truth is that there are
already many typefaces.
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So it is only natural to ask
why designing a new one.
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One of the answers can be this one:
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If you look at offerings of
commercial type foundries,
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we'll find over 150,000
various fonts for sale.
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There is a difference between
a font and a typeface, but that is
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outside of the scope of this talk.
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Majority of this huge number
of existing fonts were designed
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for headline use, and are not
suitable for using in small sizes.
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If we were to find a single font
that works well in small sizes,
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we are left with only
20% of the fonts.
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If we apply another selection criterium,
and look for a font that works
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equally well on computer
screen as on paper,
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because most of the fonts were designed
for printing press, and reading on screen
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is a relatively new phenomenon.
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So if we look for those fonts, we are
left with a tiny portion of what was
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previously a huge list of fonts.
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And if we say that we need to set type
in multiple languages, say in Russian
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Greek, or Arabic, we are left with
one or two fonts that we can choose from.
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And if someone else is using and claiming
the same font already, and we look for
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a unique typeface, there may
be nothing to choose from.
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This is the reason why new typefaces are
being constantly designed.
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And new typefaces will continue
being designed, because they
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continue reflecting the period we live in.
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My work is usually very functional.
I decide on different criteria —
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legibility, economy of type setting, and
eventually also emotional character of
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the typeface that effects the reader.
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After all testing, trying all languages,
and output in different media,
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the typeface will be ready for use.
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There are very few people who make their
living with type design.
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I estimate there may
be 200 to 300 such people.
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Here, in Slovakia,
it is exactly two people.
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Those two: Ján Filípek, and Ondrej Jób,
who happened to be my students
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in The Hague (NL),
and they design type for living.
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This diagram explains why there are so
few people designing type seriously.
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To make a typeface, one needs knowledge
of three very different disciplines,
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that can't be acquired in one place.
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You need to know how language works,
basic knowledge of linguistics, which
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is studied as a separate study field.
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Type is dependent on technology.
Technology renders all type.
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Type is processed by printing or light,
so type designer needs to know
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about type rendering and
possibly programming.
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And there is a field of design,
which is again studied separately.
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Because one studies linguistics,
technology and design in different schools
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there are few people who practice
type design.
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Good typefaces use knowledge of all
three fields.
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There are about 7,000
languages in the world.
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In India there are over 400 languages.
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There are estimates that
by the end of the century,
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80% of those languages
will disappear. It took millennia to
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develop those languages,and
only decades for them to go extinct.
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There are various reasons for
disappearance of languages.
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One of them is that English is very
popular, and erases differences
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between regions and casts.
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However, a loss of language
is similar to loss of biodiversity.
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With a loss of language we
lose access to information
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available only in
that particular language.
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India is incredibly multicultural
and multilingual
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This is a typical sign, a combination
of 6 different languages and scripts.
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I co-founded the Indian Type Foundry,
and part of our work was research into
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regional languages. This is a major script
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the Devanagari, used to write
the Hindi language.
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Our research hasn't started looking
at other typefaces,
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instead, we would look at the base.
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The most primary way to record
information is handwriting.
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We would observe regional, cultural
differences how people write.
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This foundation work allowed us to
make typefaces for regional languages,
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covering needs of the local speakers.
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In India you can encounter languages
that have no digital fonts.
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Designing a typeface for those languages
allows publishing books,
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and possibly even preservation
of those languages.
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What is interesting about type
design is that
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a typeface is not really a product.
It is more of a semi-product.
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A typeface is not ready until
someone uses it.
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Without usage a typeface is as
useful as a book that no one reads.
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The use finalises the typeface,
gives it personal character.
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I collect examples of my typefaces in use,
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because I can learn from them,
and can surprise me.
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Here are same samples of just
one typeface — Fedra Sans,
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the typeface which is used in
the logo of this city.
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European Union parliament is using it,
because it covers all EU languages.
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Perhaps less expected
use is in the Bibles.
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World Bible Translation Center is
using Fedra in most of their editions.
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And finally, the same typeface is used
on the flyers of Greek terrorist group
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responsible for bombing of embassies.
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How on earth, one can decide
that one typeface expresses
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content on these three diverse messages,
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from governmental, to biblical
to terrorist pamphlets.
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Each user probably chose this typeface
from many others, believing that
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it fits them the best.
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It is interesting to consider what
links those different users.
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Here is one example of a recent typeface
I designed — called Karloff.
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While the forms of Karloff are
very conventional, building on
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work of Italian printer
Giambattista Bodoni.
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These forms are considered very attractive
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often used in fashion industry.
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High contrast between
the thick and thin strokes
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A few decades after Bodoni,
these forms of letters
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were used to catch attention of readers
by making something
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deliberately ugly.
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I became interested in finding out
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whether it is possible to connect
beauty with ugliness.
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Typeface Karloff tries to do both.
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One construction of the letters,
can be modified by changing
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contrast between the thick and thin.
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It mathematically shifts the black areas
of letters from one side to another.
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And it is possible to continuously
shift between the
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beauty and ugliness.
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One version if pretty,
the other repulsive,
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and it is possible to
interpolate between them
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And exactly in the middle is
a neutral version,
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a type that looks just like
typewriter's letters.
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If we look closely at
books published today.
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We can find out that even books
printed in 2014, use typefaces
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that are relatively old,
designed decades or centuries ago.
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It is caused by the fact that typefaces
have a potential to outlive
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their makers.
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The forms of letters are archetypal,
changing slowly.
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There are many jobs whose results
are visible for a long time
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Type design is one of those, and its
results may stay around for
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a very long time.
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I'll end this talk with a detail
of a poster that hangs in my office.
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It is a calendar I designed.
Each line represents a day.
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This is a calendar of 21st century,
with all its days.
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Every day I come to the office,
I cross a day, to see where I am.
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If you look at this calendar,
you will see days far in the future.
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I have no idea if I will live this long.
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But if I do my work well,
and get a bit lucky,
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my work can outlive me.