December’s Font of the Month: Ottavio Bold and Italics

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Ottavio weights text

Last July I shared the story of Ottavio Bottecchia, two-time winner of the Tour de France. I loved the response from the cycling enthusiasts among you, seeing photos of your Bottecchia brand bicycles, and hearing about your excitement for the sport and Bottecchia himself.

Bottecchia won his yellow jerseys in 1924 and 1925, which means we are now entering the second year of the centennial celebration of his achievement. So I figured it was a good time to keep things rolling with Ottavio, the font I designed for his great-granddaughter, Caterina Piatti. After all, a typeface inspired by family should be available as a family!

Ottavio ulc weights

In this update (Ottavio v0.2), I’ve added three new weights (Medium, Bold, and ExtraBold), small caps, and Italics. The immediate reason for this expansion is to give Caterina more to work with in her designs commemorating the anniversary. But I also wanted to use this opportunity to feel out this design, put it through the paces, and see how Ottavio’s loose, dynamic shapes react to being emboldened or italicized.

It’s tricky to find the perfect moment to expand a single style into a family. On one hand, I want to keep things small and agile for as long as I can, so I can make changes quickly and easily and firm up the core design before blowing it up into thousands of glyphs across multiple variants—I know all too well the feeling of inertia that can set in once a family gets big and every small change becomes a heavy lift.

On the other hand, I know how instructive the experience of drawing a bold or italic can be (small caps maybe not so much 🙃). Moving towards the extremes of weight, width, or slant requires exaggerating certain design features until they reach a breaking point, which can reveal what is working and what isn’t in the core design.

With Ottavio, I navigated a delicate back-and-forth between expansion and retraction. I started with the Regular, took a little detour to try out a handful of glyphs in different weights, and then set those aside and went back to the Regular again. A while later, I did a quick foray into Italics, quickly slanting and condensing the letterforms to get a sense of what it might feel like. Then I scrapped that and went back to the Regular again, and so on. The key was to not invest so much time in any of these detours that I would be sad to delete them later!

Ottavio italics diagram

The Italic you see here is probably the fourth or fifth iteration that I worked on, and it might not be the last. Since sending you Roslindale Variable Italic way back in 2019, I’ve gotten in the habit of separating cursiveness and slant when I draw italics.

I started by drawing alternates in the Regular that are upright shapes with italic features, such as the cursive shoulders in m/n/u, the single-story a and g, and the descending f. After that, I made everything narrower, mechanically slanted it, and made the italic alternates the default glyphs. As a final step, I cleaned up the curves to account for the distortion of the slanting process. This makes it easy for me to delete the italic knowing I can somewhat-painlessly reconstitute it from the alternates later on. And it allows the italic to exist in the same interpolating designspace as the upright, combining a fluid transition in slant with an abrupt transition in cursiveness.

I feel that there is a perception that a type designer goes through the alphabet, drawing each glyph as a perfect outline, one at a time. For me, the reality is much looser and messier, with much more trial and error, roughing in and cleaning up. Maybe this is too nerdy of a metaphor, but my family-building process is less like a JPEG image that loads from the top down, and more like a Progressive JPEG where a blurry image gradually gains detail. And for Ottavio, I think the picture is starting to become clear.

Ottavio ulc italics

Perhaps it wasn’t the wisest choice to work on a big family expansion when I’m already behind on my monthly schedule, and I do appreciate your patience as I work to get caught up. If you don’t mind, I think my plan will be to keep pedaling through Ottavio and send you some lighter weights at the end of January, and then something new in mid-February. Then I can try to get back to sending you stuff closer to the beginning of the month…I will feel a whole lot better about my life once that happens!

Ottavio weights diagram

November’s Font of the Month: Fit U&lc

Font of the Month, 2024/11 PDF Try Buy $24
Fit ulc hello

Fit is a font that marked a turning point in my career. It is the narrowest font I’ve ever made, and the widest font I’ve ever made. It was the first variable font I put on the market, and I had so much fun making it that it led me to start this club in the hope that I could keep making more stuff like it. It was the font that made me realize that I wanted to take novelty typography seriously, and give it the same attention and prominence in my library as the workhorsey stuff. 

It has been an unexpected delight to see other designers translate Fit’s simple design vocabulary to different writing systems: Hebrew by Oded Ezer; Armenian by Gor Jihanian; Devanagari by Kimya Gandhi, and most recently, Tamil by Aadarsh Rajan. We can also expect to see Fit expand to more writing systems in 2025—Boom, Promphan Suksumek just posted a sneak peek of her upcoming Fit Thai the other day.

I drew Fit as an all-caps face so that I didn’t have any ascenders or descenders to worry about—filling up all of the available space was the name of the game. But new writing systems present new challenges. I recently had Boom’s Fit Thai file open on my computer to take a look at possible solutions for Thai’s ascending forms. It made me wonder what I would have done if I had been forced to draw a lowercase for Fit…and before I knew it, I was drawing one.

Fit ulc alpha

My first thought: why the heck didn’t I try this earlier!?

I think originally I was just too fixated on Fit being an “experimental” design that fits the allotted space. I never considered how much more usable it could be if it functioned a bit more like a conventional blocky sans (Nickel Gothic, for example).

The new lowercase retains Fit’s system of corners in the southwest/northeast and curves in the northwest/southeast, but the texture feels subtly different and the ascenders and descenders give the word shapes a playful bounce. I was also pleasantly surprised by how much more readable it is now! Relatively speaking, of course. 😜

Fit ulc waterfall

Most of the ideas in Fit’s lowercase have a precedent in the original all-caps design. The lowercase r? Well that’s like a shorter, upside down version of the uppercase L. The lowercase e? That’s a flip of the a, which in turn is a shorter version of Fit’s unusual capital Ð

Fit’s x-height finds its precedent in Fit’s compact accents, which duck down to create room for the diacritical mark above. Because I had already drawn shorter letters to accommodate those accents, I was already halfway to a lowercase! They also served as the starting point for a full set of small caps, which you can use to mix upper- and lowercase forms in a single word.

Fit ulc compare

Fit is an extremely “editable” font, so I hope you find a lot to play with here. You can convert it to outlines, select a bunch of points, and drag them around. And since all of the counterforms are the same, it’s easy to add a stroke to your text to get the exact form/counterform balance you are looking for (you can see a subtle example of this in the “Hello” image at the top). 

I also must shout-out Gor Jihanian—in addition to designing the aforementioned Fit Armenian, Gor has been working on a parallel track to create a multiaxis concept font designed with animation in mind. In the process, he did a lot of cleanup in Fit’s source files, which made drawing the lowercase a whole lot easier for me! This included converting the curves to corner components and making the design more modular so that letterforms align more precisely to a grid. At wdth=1200, the capital H is a square, at 600, it’s half a square, at 300, it’s a quarter-square, and so on.

Fit ulc end

October’s Font of the Month: Lentiform

Lentiform 01 2000

Earlier this month, I had the honor of giving the Beatrice Warde Memorial Lecture at St Bride Foundation in London. I spoke about my experience with Font of the Month Club, taking some time away from the club’s go-go-go schedule to reflect on why I’m still doing this. I spoke about how it still helps me bypass uncertainty and self-doubt, and endless questioning of when a typeface is finished or why it exists. And I spoke about the peace that I feel when I can set aside all other tasks and just focus on producing an email, a PDF, and some font files. (I believe St Bride may post the recording at some point; in the meantime they have many other talks to explore.)

This trip gave me a chance to see lots of letterforms and letter-people—in the St Bride Library, at the University of Reading, and at the inaugural Typography Theory Practice conference in Leeds. And I got to explore a little too. On the drizzly morning after the conference in Leeds, I went for a stroll up the canal and stumbled upon the Leeds Industrial Museum. I had a bit of time to kill before my train back to London, and my supposedly-waterproof shoes were starting to soak through to my socks, so I decided to pop in.

The museum is an old mill building packed with machinery from the Industrial Revolution, and, unsurprisingly, a healthy amount of Victorian lettering. I snapped a photo of this plaque in a stairwell—I was initially drawn in by the De Vinne-syle lettering, but found myself appreciating the tasty typographic hierarchy at play here…a blackletter, a sans, that De Vinne-esque serif, more sans, and…a Lombardic?

Leeds plaque 2000
Leeds plaque detail 2000

A plaque displayed in the Leeds Industrial Museum, 1898.

In contemporary typography, ornamented fonts are used mostly for Display, and rightly so. But here, the Lombardic caps in red play a decidedly supporting role. They offer a lowkey blast of flavor for what would essentially be a <h4> or <h5> if this were an HTML document, setting themselves apart while not drawing undue attention. It’s like the spicy ketchup that comes alongside the fries that come alongside your meal—a side for a side dish.

On my journey home last Tuesday, I started drawing. I still don’t really know what I’m doing with this font, or what I expect you to do with this font for that matter. But in the spirit of the WIP ethos I spoke about in my lecture, I decided not overthink it and just keep drawing. And now, after nine days of steady work, I’m sending you what I have so far on Lentiform, named after its distinctive lens/lentil-shaped O.

Lentiform 02 2000

When I hold old type specimens in my hands, as I was able to do earlier in the month, I am always shocked by the small-size ornamental typefaces that foundries were willing to produce. As an example, here is Two-Line Pearl Caslon’s Italian, which is about 10pt. 

I tried to channel some of this display-but-not-big energy into Lentiform, sticking with a fairly low contrast and a regularized system that contrasts convex curves with angular cuts, and spiky serifs with curling ball terminals…the R is a good example of all of these in action.

Lentiform 07 R 2000

If you look closely at that plaque, you might notice that I replaced the double-strike crossbars on A and E with simpler ones, and the blackletter-style T with a symmetrical Roman-style one. These were casualties of my process of simplification and systemization, but I thought they were fun so you can still find those original forms as OpenType alternates. 

There is a growing number of expressive digital Lombardics out there, from the techy segmentation of Minotaur Lombardic, to the striking contours of Ready Bygone, to the softened, worn edges of Kyrios. These contemporaries make me wonder if I should push Lentiform further—part of me wants to turn this into a true Micro, adding inktraps and eliminating the tight counterforms and clearances that prevent it from being truly legible below 10pt. Another part of me wants to push it towards a more traditional display face…narrower, curvier, contrastier, kind of like the line beginning “THE LORD MAYOR…” in the sample above. And a third part of me wants to just put it down and get back to other, more pragmatic projects!

I rarely start a font in the same month that I send it out, so I hope that it is at least a little interesting to see a design in its primordial stage.

Lentiform 03 2000

September’s Font of the Month: Job French Clarendon

Font of the Month, 2024/09 PDF Try Buy $24
Job french clarendon 1

The horizontal-stress slab serif was my entry point into type design, and I can’t seem to stop myself from going back to this particular well every year or two. It’s not a bestselling genre, but for me it perfectly embodies the central struggle of type design: balancing the needs of each character with the needs of the typeface as a whole.

Every letter needs to look a certain way in order to be legible, while the typeface needs the shapes arranged a certain way to act as a cohesive system. Nowhere is this struggle more evident than in the French Clarendons of the 19th century, where letters are distorted, warped, and smeared in order to satisfy the unique distribution of weight imposed by the system, as if they were flattened by a steamroller. As Bethany Heck puts it, “The goal of these designs was to create more boldness in the typeface without sacrificing horizontal space.”

While we were working on Job Clarendon, Bethany would occasionally send me scans of French Clarendons from her extensive research into nineteenth century wood types. She encouraged me to think about a horizontal-stress slab that could serve as a kind of B-side for Job Clarendon. This month, I am sending Job French Clarendon, a celebration of the bracketed horizontal stress slab serifs from the heyday of letterpress printing.

Job french clarendon 3

As with Job Clarendon, my goal was to capture the charming variety of shapes in these nineteenth century designs without reinventing or reimagining them. Essentially, I’m trying to draw the letterforms as I imagine the original designers might have drawn them if they had used a laptop with some font software installed. This involved modernizing details that were byproducts of the wood type production process, such as the lack of overshoots, kerning, and other typographic niceties. I also chose to make the uppercase serifs thicker than the lowercase so that they are closer in density.

Many of the early French Clarendons were beefy and low-contrast, but Bethany and I found ourselves really appreciating some of the examples that we found at the tail end of the wood type era, around the turn of the 20th century. They were sharper, more consistent, and more refined, with big bracketed serifs. We thought they could be an excellent jumping off point for a contemporary French Clarendon type system.

Scherer

Wood type from Roman Scherer, ca. 1910. Courtesy of Letterform Archive.
(Also, for your browsing pleasure, Letterform Archive has a full scan of an earlier Roman Scherer specimen)

What I’ve included today is a modest range of widths for you to play with, ranging from a Condensed (roughly comparable to the example above) all the way down to a Skyline that really crams things together.

Bethany and I hope that this is just the start of an “anthology” series like Job Clarendon, one that traverses a range of widths and weights, pulling from disparate historical sources from across the genre and unifying them into a cohesive family. Job French Clarendon will never be as versatile as its A-side companion, but that just makes it all the more striking when judiciously deployed at the largest possible size.

Job french clarendon 2

Forma DJR Mono

Forma DJR Mono1 2

Love Forma DJR but hate all the kerning? Then Forma DJR Mono is for you!

In Forma DJR Mono, Italian designer Ruggero Magrì has taken my revival and brought it in harmony with the limitations of the monospaced grid. On its own, it excels at conveying technical data with clarity and poise; paired with its proportional cousin, it is the perfect option for charts, graphs, and tabular data. It strikes a distinctive tone, preserving the warmth of Forma DJR with inky, rounded corners, while never making you feel like it was produced by a typewriter.

Visit djr.com/forma-monoto see more specimens, download the free trial and free student license, and purchase discounted or full licenses for your professional work.

Forma DJR Mono5
Forma DJR Mono4
Forma DJR Mono3