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- Welcome to GoodCityModern,
-
- Andrew Meit's commentary on GoodCityModern:
-
- Naturally, you may be asking yourself, 'How did he create this
- font?'. Locating a full character set was not easy. After searching in many
- libraries, I found the set at C.W. Post College (which has an excellent
- typography reference section). The reproduction was small and the copier
- worse, but I managed.
-
- Studying the page, I quickly realized several key points. One,
- Gutenberg designed the font with a deep understanding of Latin grammar and
- spelling. He had kerning pairs based on repeated letter usage throughout
- the Bible and kerned small words into tight units (i.e. our 'of' and
- 'and'). Second, that he posited key geometric guidelines to aid in creating
- the font. He was doing more than just capturing the scribe-like strokes of
- his day, but in addition had a respect for the metal and ink to be used in
- printing his Bible. This second point made it possible to actually create
- the font; because of the smallness of the reproduced letters, I had to
- re-create (for techies, 'reverse - engineer') them. (My loupe and the page
- became very close friends!)
- After some hand drawings to 'feel' the letter forms, I scanned the
- page at 150 dpi and made a bitmap font using Fontastic Plus. Sometimes, I
- felt another hand on my mouse while fat-bitting away late at night... Then,
- I typed Latin text to see the typeface in actual context.
-
- Next, using the bitmap font, I printed samples at 200% enlargement
- with smoothing on to get a larger size to scan and clean up in MacPaint.
- Did preliminary versions in Fontographer 3.0.5 thru 3.1, but was not
- satisfied with the outlines or control of the outlines - threw away about
- nine months work. While testing Freehand 3.0, I noticed that its new
- features would at last give me the tools and control I wanted. So, I placed
- the scanned images into Freehand 3.0 to trace and refine - using all its
- features to accomplish the task. Yes, bcp by bcp, The font came alive.
- There were days I felt a presence in the room...
- Once the letter forms were done, I simply option-copied the
- FreeHand paths into Fontographer 3.2. Did further refinements using remove
- overlap and decompose composites; then created kerning pairs. Based on the
- same careful study Gutenberg did on Latin letters, I needed to create 800
- pairs! Now, as of 5:15 June 18 1991, using Fontographer 3.3, I was
- finished.
-
- A few historical notes. The original typeface was created for
- Latin, not for modern English; hence, the 'modern' in the name of my
- translation. I had to create a full Roman set everyone can use. However,
- there is an exact Latin version which is not done; which will be used for
- an involved multi-media work some time in the future. The 'goodcity' part
- of its name comes from German: guten - good, burg - city. (actually, Earl
- Allen, a fellow Altsysian coined the term - thanks!)
-
- Enjoy and use in good health.
-
- Andrew S. Meit Software tester (and Stackhead) Altsys Corporation