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Modern Love
Breaking from our catalog of typefaces to create a new handwritten font family, Modern Love was born out of our desire to see what would happen if we took a step back from the norm. We weren’t looking for the perfection of the many calligraphy techniques, but more of a natural way of writing with the same tools. Our escapist experiment into casual lettering culminated into 4 fonts: Modern Love Regular, Grunge, Rough and Caps.
Modern Love Regular is a hand-painted script, each glyph individually designed with a pointed brush and walnut ink. The aim was to create an effortless hand-drawn feel while keeping the contrast high density.
Playful, yet polished, this font works very well when accentuated with the family’s two distinctive styles: Modern Love Grunge, simulating a washed-out effect, perfect to add a vintage look to your projects; and Modern Love Rough, with its crunchy borders, makes letters visibly rough-around-the edges and gives large letters an unmistakeable pop. All three fonts include a hand-painted set of ornaments, swashes and alternates to limitlessly customize and decorate your texts, accessible through Opentype features.
Modern Love Caps is the fourth font, a handwritten Sans Serif that ties the family together with its simplicity and readability. Designed with a pointed nib and Indian ink, this font boasts a different style that perfectly complements Modern Love Regular, Grunge and Rough.
The result is a fresh font family perfect to create headlines, posters, DIY hand-lettered artwork, books, holiday cards, wrapping paper, invitations, T-shirts, labels, packaging for cosmetics, fashion supplies, food products, artisanal goods, and an endless array of options for your projects. Modern Love…when brush meets passion.
Modern Love Regular, Grunge and Rough contain 800 glyphs
Modern Love Caps contains 309 glyphs
This font is available at Myfonts bit.ly/1NnpXDc
Available at Myfonts
Bordonaro Spur
www.myfonts.com/fonts/calderon-estudio-type-foundry/bordo...
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Bordonaro Script
www.myfonts.com/fonts/calderon-estudio-type-foundry/bordo...
13.22 Tattoo Studio
Queens Park
London
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SUDTIPOS NEWS
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We are proud to announce the release of Courtesy Script, our latest ornamental tribute to late S. XiX penmanship.
Get Courtesy > www.myfonts.com/fonts/sudtipos/courtesy-script-pro/
ABOUT COURTESY
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As in Victorian times, the precious, hand-lettered look of custom stationery is back in vogue. Enter Courtesy Script, my newest ornamental script typeface.
Courtesy captures the elegance and propriety of finely practiced Spencerian penmanship, in particular the Zanerian school. Its lowercase is notably understated, a simple monoline with very wide connections that ease readability. In the capitals, Courtesy adds variety in both the weight of the strokes, and in degrees of flourish — from merely fancy to over-the-top engrossery.
Based on an alphabet found in a 19th-century penmanship journal, Ale created hundreds of additional, stylistically complementary letterforms. Alternate capitals and lowercase letters, swashed lowercase forms, and ending and ornamental swashes; numerals, punctuation, and non-English and accented characters.
With virtually endless ways to customize its use, Courtesy helps designers create fluid, signature looks on stationery and invitations, book covers, fashion layouts, and packaging.
More fonts
Visit www.sudtipos.com
O-H .... I-O!
The Ohio State University marching band spells out "Ohio" during a halftime performance.
Three newish scripts for flickr and firefox 6.0.2 All are from Userscripts .org.
I'll add the URL's to each down the bottom if your interested in adding them to your firefox browser.
Photo view count on Flickr Photostream. Circled in Yellow above, it puts all your View Stats on your main page.
New Flickr Discuss Post Notification Up in the top right again circled in Yellow is a nice extension that uses color coded mail icons for the Groups I administer or follow. If any new activity is added to a group it pops out and tells me what group and how many new notifications have been added since you last checked them out. A hover over tells you what group it is if you forget the color, click on one and you go directly to the groups discussion area. The normal flickr mail icon is just below these.
Widescreen, really not displayed here but it utilizes all the space a widescreen monitor has to offer.
Photo View count userscripts.org/scripts/show/79829
New Flickr Discuss Post Notification userscripts.org/scripts/show/76587
Widescreen userscripts.org/scripts/show/73305
I had this one-page story to do and I usually draw a thumbnail and think just on the key sentences and dialogues. But I realized this one would have so much text that I needed the full text in order to see how much space I'd have left for the art.
So first I wrote all the text for the story. After that, I divided it in small blocks that would end up being the captions and balloons (that column on the left).
Then I started laying them down on the page. At first I wanted to do big panels, some "narrative panels" only with text (just like in Casanova), but I decided it would be best for the story if I did lots of small panels, even if a little art just to make it a real comicbook, you know?
I drew some panels there for guidance and now I'm gonna print this and draw on the remaining space.
I really don't do it like this very often, but sometimes you gotta go with what you get.
Get it
www.myfonts.com/fonts/sudtipos/merengue-script/
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Merengue Script is the second typeface designed by Panco, once again together with Ale Paul, who supervised the whole development. In this opportunity, the process of shape research and the systematization of signs led him to dive into new waters. The objective was to generate a system of signs in which the construction of such was not directly bound to traditional calligraphy, nor to texts typography. Instead, the point was to create signs inspired in “Brush pen” calligraphy but with their main features drawn or literally illustrated. The result was a font with personality, authenticity and uncommon formal aspects that make Merengue Script an interesting, highly attractive and rather unusual font.
From the very beginning, the search was based on creating a font with weight and good presence in big formats, but, at the same time, efficient for brief texts of small formats. The aim was to make it usable mainly in candy, sweets and chocolate packaging.
The predominance of round shapes, harmonious modulations and funny and friendly-looking visual rhythms spark a special effect in the usage of Merengue Script. Texts are enhanced with an interesting visual charm, capable of transforming a very simple text into a virtual illustration that semantically reinforces the messages in a simple way, without putting legibility at risk.
With a basic set of stylistic alternatives full of frills and flounces for initials, ornamental and final letters, plus a set of disconnected signs, Merengue Script offers a wide and versatile range of options for graphic designers in the process of packaging design.
Get it
www.myfonts.com/fonts/sudtipos/blog-script/
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Technology is making it so that we’re all connected without the need for the physical-presence kind of being connected. That is strange, fascinating, and has a certain magnetism that is very difficult to resist. What’s at stake is no less than the transformation of centuries of human behaviour, and that’s part of the fascination. But while our existence morphs and we rush headlong into our socially minimalist future, we use our present culture to helplessly signal our nostalgia about our past. We know what our future will be missing, and we’re already full of nostalgia about it, but we know that what little we can do about isn’t going to affect the outcome that much.
So, almost in full hindsight now, the DIY implosion of the past few years must have really been a reaction to our technological dis/connection. In typography, the minimalist future is already here, with something as austere as the sans serif having become the preferred expression of progress and fortune, both part of the connected isolation we are undergoing. But when physical interaction must take place, like coffee shops and gin joints, our organic alphabets ride high and mighty. That sense of human heritage — elegance and exuberance in our writing, the use of flaws to charmingly brand our own individualism — keeps turning up in all kinds of places, most unexpected of which is the digital world. The overall message seems to be that we’re still creative, imaginative, and unique. In the digital world, on blogs where we write about our puny music and fashion preferences, we’re just articulating this individualism of ours, this third domain of existence our future seems eager to dismiss.
These were the thoughts behind Blog Script, the second collaboration between Carolina Marando and Alejandro Paul, after their successful stint with the Distillery set of fonts. This typeface comes in two weights, alternates for most letters, and a strong aesthetic rooted in individuality and freedom of spirit. Use it to be alone together, to tell the world that we’re still human, for now.
Can you guess which letter inspired the form of these links?
I finally listed this one of a kind chain in my shop.
This frock was created using my Ballerinas on French Script.
www.spoonflower.com/designs/473106
Judy Ginns creates beautiful little girl creations in Queensland, Australia. This one was made with my fabric printed on Cotton Voile. The fabric that she used is my Little Ballerinas on French Script, on Spoonflower Fabrics.
Judy has just opened up her shop on etsy called ChasingMini
CP 7013 (one of Canadian Pacific's new heritage units) leads 288 through Lyndon Station. After a brief pause at Wisconsin St. and a flagged crossing from the conductor they began rolling again only to stop and hold the siding at Kilbourn.
Lyndon Station, Wisconsin
CP 7013 CP 8951
James Danger Harvey, the skin gallery Tattoo, 5739 Auburn blvd Sacramento CA 95841, black and grey, tattoo, script, 916-247-3538, lettering, back piece, back tattoo, notorious
Mike Cahill, a visiting screenwriter, meets with creative writing student David Harrison to review his script. Photo by: Philip Channing
For Marleen’s presentation of her project ‘A history of written Latin script’ at the tga-symposium in Raabs, I sketched this poster with a Hochuli-ish ‘g’.
13.22 Tattoo Studio
Queens Park
London
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www.instagram.com/sourgrapestattoo
sourgrapestattoo@yahoo.com
Cuneiform script is one of the earliest known systems of writing, distinguished by its wedge-shaped marks on clay tablets, made by means of a blunt reed for a stylus. The name cuneiform itself simply means "wedge shaped", from the Latin cuneus "wedge" and forma "shape," and came into English usage "probably from Old French cunéiforme."
The original Sumerian script was adapted for the writing of the Akkadian, Eblaite, Elamite, Hittite, Luwian, Hattic, Hurrian, and Urartian languages, and it inspired the Ugaritic and Old Persian alphabets. Cuneiform writing was gradually replaced by the Phoenician alphabet during the Neo-Assyrian Empire. By the 2nd century AD, the script had become extinct, and all knowledge of how to read it was lost until it began to be deciphered in the 19th century.