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Typographic Universe by Steven Heller & Gail Anderson

Date:2014-08-20 03:39:25| News|Browse: 93|Source: Dexigner|Author:
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IntroductionEven those who are not graphic designers know that type is everyw

Even those who are not graphic designers know that type is everywhere: fonts and typefaces fill everything we consume or inhabit.

They communicate, inform, sell, explain... and yet finding serendipitous letterforms in the least likely locations can also excite and inspire.

Once experienced, it is impossible not to see letters in anything from forests to housing projects, from leaves to brickwork. The eye becomes accustomed to seeing a world built of letters.

"Typography styled out of non-traditional sources is not a new phenomenon," Steven Heller and Gail Anderson write in the Introduction to their new book The Typographic Universe.

"Alphabetic topiary has long been a feature of landscape gardening, for instance. Metaphorical faces made out of anything, from animate to inanimate objects, have also been around for a while, an offshoot, perhaps of the typographic trompe l'oeil."

Unlike most books on typography that present the "best" and most refined examples, the object of this inspiring sourcebook is to reveal the "lost" or "unseen" typographies in nature and our cities.

From machine-made and sculptural forms to flora and fauna, from the fading ghost types on buildings dating to a pre-digital age to the subterranean forms found beneath our urban centers, and from crowd-sourced creations to the popular vernacular, there is a universe of letterforms all around us.

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