Register  ▪  Login  ▪  Current Issue  ▪  Calendar  ▪  Advertise
search
Skip Navigation Links
Resources
Inspiration
Competitions
Directory
Education
DesignCasts
Print Blog
Shop
About Us
 


 

 
 
 
 
Liza Pro wins best actress!

About the author

Ellen Lupton is the curator of contemporary design at Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum, and director of the graphic design MFA program at Maryland Institute College of Art. She is the author of numerous books, including Thinking with Type. Follow her at @EllenLupton


 

The Oscars of Type

by Ellen Lupton
Share/Save/Bookmark
Assaulted with ceaseless buzz about the Academy Awards, I can’t help wishing that a well-wrought typeface could attract as much attention as a 90-minute film. Various type blogs and font foundries released their own best-of lists at the end of 2009. I sifted through them and cast my own votes. Each of the selections presented here comes from a published list of the year’s top typefaces. Most of these lists reflect the personal tastes of the editor, while some are based on a font company’s own sales figures. What’s the Avatar of the type world? According to MyFonts.com, the all-around best-selling typeface of 2009 was Eduardo Manso’s GeoGrotesque. Watch more winners walk down the red carpet below.
 
 
 
Best Typeface: GeoGrotesque, by Eduardo Manso, Em Type

A tough modular sans with a soft edge, GeoGrotesque has an emotional range that revs up fast from razor Thin to beefy Bold. This crowd-pleasing typeface capitalizes on big, memorable gestures rather than psychological nuance.

Nominated by Slanted.de, MyFonts.com, and FontShop
 
 
 
Best Actor: Mr Eaves, by Zuzana Licko, Émigré

Finally, the dainty and graceful Mrs Eaves has found her sans-serif counterpart. With his diminutive x-height, loose letter spacing, and lovely bones, Mr Eaves offers a balanced match for his lyrical sister. Like Colin Firth in A Single Man, this elegant sans really knows how to wear a suit.

Nominated by ILoveTypography.com
 

 
Best Actress: Liza Pro, by Underware

A brush script with bite, Liza Pro merges artifice and spontaneity. Tapping the power of OpenType, this fast-moving font uses automatic substitution to conjure a constantly changing performance from 4,000 unique glyphs. Take that, Penelope Cruz.

Nominated by MyFonts
 

 
Best Sans: Alright Sans, by Jackson Cavanaugh, Okay Type

The kid’s Alright. This ballsy geometric sans has a humanist underbelly that helps him play those sensitive scenes in between car chases. The Matt Damon of typefaces.

Nominated by MyFonts and ILoveTypography.com
 
 
Best Serif: Calluna, by Jos Buivenga

Calluna brings a dash of motion to the static archetype of the slab. In the tradition of 19-century Egyptians, slab serifs anchor a letterform solidly to the baseline. Not so with Calluna, whose serifs are animated with a subtle forward direction.

 

 
Best Superfamily: Trilogy, by Jeremy Tankard, Jeremy Tankard Typography

Inspired by nineteenth-century commercial printing styles, Trilogy includes not only sans and slab serif typefaces but also a surprising new “fat face” variant, with ultrawide verticals and wafer-thin serifs. Trilogy packs an enormous range of expression into a single family: John Wayne meets Johnny Depp.

Nominated by ILoveTypography.com
 
 
Best Actor in a Supporting Role: Giorgio Sans, by Christian Schwartz

Commissioned for The New York Times T magazine, this gutsy typeface takes on character roles that demand a big personality and an even bigger x-height.

Nominated by ILoveTypography.com
 
 

Best Revival: Burgundica, by Gerrit Noordzij, The Enschedé Type Foundry

Burgundica is the love child of Gerrit Noordzij, one of the Netherlands’ most influential typographic designers, teachers, and scholars. Noordzij is a strong advocate for the role of Bastarda scripts in the evolution of roman typefaces. His inglourious Burgundica is based on a 1450 manuscript produced in Hainaut (present-day Belgium).

Nominated by Typefacts.com
 

 
Best Foreign Language Font: Nara, by Andrej Krátky with Nikola Djurek and Peter Bilak, Typotheque

Nara combines the oblique axis of humanist letterforms with the sharp contrast and flat serifs of modern faces (Garamond hooks up with Bodoni). The italic forms are especially exotic. Like many typefaces in the Typotheque stable, Nara supports dozens of languages, including Bosnian, Croatian, Hawaiian, Hungarian, Lithuanian, and Swedish. Playing soon in a theater far far away.

Nominated by Typefacts.com
 
 
 
Best Visual Effects: Klimax, by Ondrej Jób, Typotheque

With its engorged strokes and super-slim counters, Klimax delivers “the money shot.” This fantastically foxy typeface brings an undercurrent of theoretical rigor to a blatantly sexy genre. Pamela Anderson, meet Meryl Streep.

Nominated by Fontwerk.com and Slanted.de
 

 
Best Free Font: League Gothic, by the League of Moveable Type; revival of Morris Fuller Benton’s Alternate Gothic No.1

Not all free fonts are oozing monsters suited only for horror flicks or heavy metal shows. League Gothic, a well-constructed revival of a Morris Fuller Benton classic, is designed and distributed by the League of Moveable Type, dedicated to expanding the culture of free fonts.
 
Nominated by WebDesignLedger.com  
 
 
 
Lifetime Achievement: Wim Crouwel

Among the most esteemed awards in the typographic world is the Gerrit Noordzij Prize, which recognizes an individual for extraordinary work as a type designer, typographer, or educator. The 2009 prize went to the Dutch master Wim Crouwel, whose “new alphabet” of 1967 provided an early vision of the digital future. The prize was handed to him by Tobias Frere-Jones in a moving ceremony in the Hague.
 
Nominated by WebDesignLedger.com
 



 

More resources for graphic designers:

* Live and On-Demand Webcasts
* Visit MyDesignShop.com – Your comprehensive source of books, products and tools for Designers
* Sign up to receive Print and Daily Heller eNewsletters.

Reader Comments
Login to add a comment. Not a registered user? Register Now!

Adobe Presents: Transform Photoshop or Illustrator Artwork with Flash Catalyst




Wednesday, Sept. 8, 4pm EST

This free DesignCast will show you how to transform artwork created in Photoshop or Illustrator into high-quality interactive content that can liven up your web pages or make complex information engaging and easier to understand. Design simple projects in SWF format or tackle more complex projects built in collaboration with a developer. This webcast will guide you through the creation of a Flash Catalyst project using CS5 Design Premium.


Sign up for this free DesignCast today!
Follow us / Join us:
 
Facebook  Flickr StumbleUpon Twitter
 
Share  Share this page with your friends.
Image of the Day

 
Bibliotheque, Identity & packaging concept for Space.NK.Men

 
Most Recent Articles
Three Nonprofits Offer Insight into the Changing Sustainability Debate
Work With Us: Intern at Print
A Book Cover Anthology: Penguin Turns 75
Beyond Foamcore: James Victore Crafts a Cover for Print
The Complex Bonds Between Design and Surrealism
Most Popular

Carry Hope

13 designers create a custom tote bag for their favorite charity. Featuring the work of: Atelier Télescopique, Büro Destruct, Christoph Niemann, Deanne Cheuk, Ed Fella, Geoff McFetridge, Hort, James Joyce, Laurent Fetis, Rick Valicenti, Si Scott, Spin, and Sawdust. Order one today!
 
 
Check Out Past Issues

Subscribe to Print and get all 6 issues for just $40

In This Issue
Original art and strong opinions from Art Chantry, Joe Duffy, Barbara Glauber, Michael Ian Kaye, Oded Ezer, and many others. Also: regular columnists Rick Poynor on Surrealism, Khoi Vinh on the rise of apps, and Paul Shaw on Veljovic Script. Cover by James Victore.
See the complete Table of Contents

 
 
Skip Navigation Links
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
Site Map
Copyright © 2010 by F+W Media.