Erikrighthand
details about the font | |
---|---|
Name | Erikrighthand [wrong?] |
Style | Regular [wrong?] |
category | Handschriftliche Antiqua [wrong?] |
designer(s) | Erik van Blokland [wrong?] |
foundry | FontFont [wrong?] |
date released | 1990 [wrong?] |
details about the photo | |
author | Julchen |
date | January 14, 2012 – 13:27 |
place | Am Westfalenpark, 44139 Dortmund, Deutschland |
more information about the font
The archetypes of digital handwriting, these fonts were the result of experiments with (at the time) new software, and years of indoctrination of how to write. For Erik van Blokland and Just van Rossum of LettError – educated in an environment where handwritten letterforms were considered to be the origin of all typography (both studied at the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in The Hague under Gerrit Noordzij) – it was a natural step for them to derive a typographically sound font from their own hands. They wrote out the alphabet (Just is left-handed and used a thin Fineliner, Erik is right-handed and used a fat marker), then scanned and digitized the letters on a computer. These fonts became the first of many which allowed people to indulge in the irony of typing a letter in a handwritten script. LettError’s pioneering work in this area has opened up whole new areas in type design. For typo-buffs, FF Hands includes a set of small caps and oldstyle figures, and even ligatures.
In 2010, the world’s first digital handwriting fonts were finally reissued in OpenType with hundreds of additional ligatures and glyphs for FF Justlefthand and a revised design for a more authentic FF Erikrighthand. The fonts are again at the forefront of digital handwriting
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