By : Suzanne
Today marks a milestone in my journey to create a typeface that I can share with the world and can be my rough around the edges legacy long after I am gone đ . Creating your own typeface can be a time consuming but very rewarding experience. I definitely enjoy the process and look forward to creating more custom Typefaces in the future.
To create this particular, font I used software called Birdfont which is free and open source. If you like you can make a donation on the website as well if you are feeling generous : http://birdfont.org/. There are Mac, Windows, Linux and BSD versions of Birdfont.
I was originally going to make a blog post with a step-by-step guide to how to make your own typeface, but throughout the process of creating this little guy, I realized that there are more than enough step-by-step guides all over the internet. Just Google it and ye shall find. Some of these posts demonstrate how one would start from a hand drawn image on paper, while others take a more digital approach. (Birdfont has some nice tutorials on their website as well)
I wanted to do something that was hand drawn, but then cleaned up a little bit in Illustrator. So that the typeface would have a hand drawn feeling, but wouldnât be too sloppy. I took a trip to the art supply store and I got myself some graph paper, a nice mechanical pencil, an eraser and some graphic pens.
Itâs not so often in my line of work that I get the opportunity to draw something out on paper, and translate that to a finished product. Usually I sketch things on paper and completely recreate them digitally, so my sketches are frequently sloppy and they are typically in the very early stages of a project, whether that is for a logo, a graphic element or a sketch / mock-up of a website.
This typeface creation project ended up being a process that evolved as I went. It was something that I planned to do when I had a spare minute or two. In the end however, I started to look forward to working on it and I spent more of my spare time.
The font didnât really turn out to be perfect. It reminded me of learning to knit. There were mistakes that I had to go back and fix. There are a few letters that have imperfections that I actually ended up keeping, because I think that they have character đ
I realize that itâs a pretty goofy looking font, closer in design to Comic Sans than it is to Helvetica or Trade Gothic. I see it being used for a chalkboard effect, or to perhaps to display a quote from a circus clown.
We decided to name the typeface Paper, simply because thatâs where it started. In the end this was mostly a learning process, a starting point for my passage into designing typography.
Feel free to use it to design the invitation for your “Life Begins at Forty” birthday invitation, or your childâs lemonade stand :
If you have the time and the inclination you should try designing something yourself.
Thanks for reading!