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Campcraft: Free OHG Fonts on Dafont.com
OHG now on Dafont.com
So far Just there is just one free OHG font on Dafont.com; Campcraft Basic.
Remember those Popsicle sticks that clicked together and you could make things from them with your sticky little fingers, like... Camp crafts? Well, no. Of course you don't. You were too young. That's why there is Campcraft.
Contains 205 characters in 9 rangesDownload your copy today. I'd love to see what you do with it. you can post a link to it as a comment below or email me an image.
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Baro Italic - Almost Ready.
Screen cap; Baro Black Italic ligs in FontLab' Metrics window
Well, I'm just about ready let this guy out of the pen. Just little bit more kerning.
Really?
Really?
You might think you are all done with kerning? In fact, you are probably very far from it.
Making an italic is in part as obvious as it looks—Slant the letters a few degrees in a single batch operation. Boom!
Not so fast. In the case of Baro, I naturally finished the roman, version of Baro Black before starting the italic, so all the glyphs are there, and in their final form. Then I slanted it 12 degrees. After that, I went through the entire font and edited each glyph to correct distortions caused by slanting them. The most obvious correction needed was to the vertical gaps between parts of letters and figures and all of round shapes. Finally, I added tails to the 'f' 'f' ligatures and 'l's, made the 'a'; a single story and one or two other things to soften the font up.
Lastly came the metrics. The roman metrics were probably about 70% OK. That is another story, but there are extra kerning pairs to compensate for letter spacing which could have been better. It is what happens when you start one part of a job before you finish an earlier one. You become too invested in the the time that went into the second part and it ends up being more efficient to fix your letter spacing mistakes with additional kerning pairs. (This is my first completed font). The altered geometry threw everything else off. I re-did the letter spacing for the whole font pretty much from scratch. You know how it goes—You fix one thing problem and create two new ones. Replace all your old mistakes with brand new ones. Or it can seem that way. But, eventually, with enough patience, you get to a place where the end is in sight. Kerning should be all done tonight and Baro Black Italic will be on the market next week.
Lastly came the metrics. The roman metrics were probably about 70% OK. That is another story, but there are extra kerning pairs to compensate for letter spacing which could have been better. It is what happens when you start one part of a job before you finish an earlier one. You become too invested in the the time that went into the second part and it ends up being more efficient to fix your letter spacing mistakes with additional kerning pairs. (This is my first completed font). The altered geometry threw everything else off. I re-did the letter spacing for the whole font pretty much from scratch. You know how it goes—You fix one thing problem and create two new ones. Replace all your old mistakes with brand new ones. Or it can seem that way. But, eventually, with enough patience, you get to a place where the end is in sight. Kerning should be all done tonight and Baro Black Italic will be on the market next week.
Sunday, November 21, 2010
Baro - OHG's first retail font
Hello, everyone. Welcome back to my blog. Earlier this month, I finally published my first font, so I'll be updating this blog again.
Baro is a powerful, fun and expressive font, great for loud, cheerful and super-fat headlines and packaging for odd novelty toys. With its bold and distinctive stylized geometric forms, it is ideal for logos, heavy machinery and wacky party invites.
The font had its beginning in a handful of rigidly geometric uppercase letters from an unidentified 1960s or 70s era press-down lettering font, which in turn was possibly a revival of a 20’s era Art Deco font. The exercise quickly expanded into a complete typeface with 300+ characters including several catch words (word glyphs), stylistic alternates, discretionary ligatures, multilingual support and both lining and old style numerals. Baro maintains much of the characteristic geometric rigidity of the original handful of letters, but with the addition of just a little bit of flare, cheerfulness breaks through, like a wink and a smile on the face of a fat and otherwise stern policeman.
This is to be the first of a family that will include and an Italic (to be released later this week and previewed in the new banner at the top of this page) as swash a font of multilingual catchwords plus a few more surprises.
Stay tuned, and thank you.
Baro is a powerful, fun and expressive font, great for loud, cheerful and super-fat headlines and packaging for odd novelty toys. With its bold and distinctive stylized geometric forms, it is ideal for logos, heavy machinery and wacky party invites.
The font had its beginning in a handful of rigidly geometric uppercase letters from an unidentified 1960s or 70s era press-down lettering font, which in turn was possibly a revival of a 20’s era Art Deco font. The exercise quickly expanded into a complete typeface with 300+ characters including several catch words (word glyphs), stylistic alternates, discretionary ligatures, multilingual support and both lining and old style numerals. Baro maintains much of the characteristic geometric rigidity of the original handful of letters, but with the addition of just a little bit of flare, cheerfulness breaks through, like a wink and a smile on the face of a fat and otherwise stern policeman.
This is to be the first of a family that will include and an Italic (to be released later this week and previewed in the new banner at the top of this page) as swash a font of multilingual catchwords plus a few more surprises.
Stay tuned, and thank you.
Thursday, February 11, 2010
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