Weirdly enough, font-size and typeface came up in two
conversations I had last week. The first being at my internship, where two of
the graphic designers sang the praises of Wired magazine and the typeface they developed. Although the text looked familiar to
the naked eye, I was told that the font was intuitive enough to figure out
certain spaces between characters and lines when placed together. As a result
the paragraphs look tidier and the white rivers that appear between words when
pages are viewed as a whole disappear into uniformity. Walbaum became
Wiredbaum (and then changed again). Like Wired’s adaptation of a print magazine to the iPad, it’s a wonderful
example of how analogue and digital technologies have converged, but there is
more to font-size than specifics and innovations like that.
In fact, there’s so much more that any quick Google or
Wikipedia search will keep you up for days on details of font-size. However, I
think writing about that misses the point of these blogs. Instead of
researching font-size and pouring out 500 words of other people’s work
condensed into my own short blog post, I figured I would research the context
of how we got to the topic of font-size in class.
Fifteen minutes passed and I had finished watching Steve
Jobs speak to Stamford’s 2005 graduating students. Yes he gets into details of
calligraphy, typeface and font-size, but avoids any talk of why serifs are
designed to slow our eyes down or what point size a newspaper uses. Instead, he
talks about what impact they had on his life; how this led to the development
of the Macintosh computer and how “it was impossible to connect the dots looking forward
when I was in college. But it was very, very clear looking backwards ten years
later” (2005).
Steve Jobs' 2005 Standford Commencement Address - YouTube (2008)
So now I’m not going to think of font-size in a literal
sense – instead I’ll put it in a context that I feel better suits Steve Jobs
and the lecture we had in class. What is my calligraphy? Where will an intimate
knowledge of something as overlooked as typography and font-size change my
life?
I can’t answer that now, but Jobs offers us advice on how to
get to the answer – stay hungry, stay foolish (2005). Out of context it is odd advice,
but the point that he is making is that we should not be passive in life.
People rarely stumble upon their vocation when they stand still, and we should
all be passionate about things that take our interest because that tiny obsession you have about font-size could change the world. I’ll continue to wake up at ungodly hours to watch
my favourite football team, embrace tinnitus at a young age by watching too
many punk bands play in tiny rooms and spend countless hours on overnight buses through towns that are hardly on the map. They're definitely foolish passions, but one day I hope they'll be to me what something like typography and font-size were to Steve Jobs. Until then, I'll stay hungry and stay foolish.
Gregory Reher 2010, Vintage Apple Advertising | Bob Dylan - Gregory Reher, accessed 22/9/2011, http://gregoryreher.com/2010/10/vintage-apple-advertising-bob-dylan/
StanfordUniversity 2008, Steve Jobs' 2005 Stanford Commencement Address - YouTube, accessed 22/9/2011, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UF8uR6Z6KLc
Stanford University 2005, Text of Steve Jobs' Commencement Address (2005), accessed 22/9/2011, http://news.stanford.edu/news/2005/june15/jobs-061505.html
Gregory Reher 2010, Vintage Apple Advertising | Bob Dylan - Gregory Reher, accessed 22/9/2011, http://gregoryreher.com/2010/10/vintage-apple-advertising-bob-dylan/
StanfordUniversity 2008, Steve Jobs' 2005 Stanford Commencement Address - YouTube, accessed 22/9/2011, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UF8uR6Z6KLc
Stanford University 2005, Text of Steve Jobs' Commencement Address (2005), accessed 22/9/2011, http://news.stanford.edu/news/2005/june15/jobs-061505.html
Awesome post!! At first I thought 'fonts' was a really weird topic but the way you approached and interpreted it made for a really good blog!
ReplyDeleteIt is hard to criticise as it seems like a very polished read. The only thing I could suggest is maybe explaining the font jargon a little better in the opening paragraph. When its states, "Walbaum became Wiredbaum" could you perhaps hyperlink to a page which shows what exactly Walbaum is?
Thanks Gabby, I've added some links and changed a bit of the text.
ReplyDeleteCool post Lewis,
ReplyDeleteI like that you took a different route to discussing this rad topic.
Honestly, I can't find much fault in this. I do however love the whole Steve Jobs typography combo - makes me want to learn more about fonts.