At first, I was making this project just for fun and to improve my typography skills. I made a few compositions and desided to put them into a closed background forms to “lock” it. After I was inspired by letterpress letters … the plain letters became 3D and the backgrounds became cans.
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Periodic Table of Typefaces Print
24 × 18″ Art Print
Printed on Black Uncoated 80# Cover
Metallic Silver Ink (PMS 877)
Printed offset
Created by Camdon Wilde, Released through Scribble on Everything
(via Felt & Wire Shop)
By Farhad Manjoo
January 13, 2011
The people who study and design the typewritten word decided long ago that we should use one space, not two, between sentences … Hundreds of years ago some typesetters would end sentences with a double space, others would use a single space, and a few renegades would use three or four spaces. Inconsistency reigned in all facets of written communication; there were few conventions regarding spelling, punctuation, character design, and ways to add emphasis to type. But as typesetting became more widespread, its practitioners began to adopt best practices. [James Felici, author of the The Complete Manual of Typography] writes that typesetters in Europe began to settle on a single space around the early 20th century. America followed soon after. Every modern typographer agrees on the one-space rule.
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Simon Foster gathered all the cool free fonts »> GET SOME!
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