Welcome to our 1st Quarter Trends email. [View in Browser]( [Hot New Fonts]( [Best Sellers]( [What's New]( [Special Offers]( [Bundles]( [WhatTheFont]( [The Manual] Type Trends As a graphic communicator, your work needs to stand out in a heavily manufactured visual culture. You need to intrigue people, create art as well as utility and build consistent brand without it becoming static. Type can do this. Meet Katy and Milton
To find out how, we reached out to Katy Fischer and Milton Un â both judges in last yearâs Communication Arts magazineâs Typography Competition. Katy Fischer is a graduate of Drake University and moved to St Louis, Missouri shortly after valediction. Her first design gig there, was at a small âmom & popâ design studio. In 2004 she went to work at TOKY as a senior designer, and has been there ever since. The reason sheâs been there so long? âTOKY has always given me the opportunity to do amazing work,â she explains. Clearly true. Katy is one of the countryâs most awarded creatives. Milton Un graduated from the Minneapolis College of Art and Design, and has worked in the Minneapolis area at several agencies. He was design director at Target Corporation before joining Carmichael Lynch, four years ago. âTo me purpose and intention,â Milton says, âare the most important things to achieve in design.â He brings this vision to clients as diverse as Nike, Apple, ESPN, Adidas, Pentagram and Red Bull. Like Minds
Not surprisingly, Katy and Milton are in-sync with whatâs happening with type and typography today. They both say that sites like [Instagram]( and [Underconsideration]( are great places to view cutting-edge typographic design. They also see 70s nostalgia and Victorian typefaces as a significant direction. On the flip-side, they say that typographic wit, design authenticity and simplicity is becoming more important. If youâre looking for 70s nostalgia and Victorian typefaces, a simple search on MyFonts will quickly reveal scores of designs like [Data 70]([â¢](, [Roberta]([â¢](and [Rumble Brave Vintage Fonts](. Chobani® Effect
In addition, Katy and Milton both contend that something called the âChobani® Effectâ (a term Katy coined) is clearly driving a lot of typeface choices. A little over three years ago, the folks at Chobani yogurt released a complete redesign of its branding â including new bespoke typefaces, to replace the existing designs. The typefaces could be described as the love child of [Windsorâ¢]( and [ITC Souvenir®](. According to Katy, âThe Chobani typeface family is approachable and friendly â but not sappy. Itâs a little quirky. If it were a person, it would be someone youâd want to hang-out with.â While Windsor and Souvenir date back to the early 20th century, there are plenty of new takes on this genuinely friendly vibe. [Boston Angel](, [Gazpacho](, [Quincy CF]( and [Recoleta]( are just four of a bevy of Chobani Effect typefaces available from MyFonts. Milton echoes Katyâs thoughts and suggests a couple of other designs. âFor a while now thereâs been a trend of warm and friendly fonts and graphic design in fashion and branding that Iâve enjoyed. Designers and typographers looking to the fun of [Cooper Blackâ¢]( and [Hobo]([®]( variants, and expressive typography.â âThe Twins mural is really a mixture of all this,â Milton continues. âWe took strong typography that is synonymous with sports and hard work, and mixed it with a spirit of fun and freedom. We made it textural, abstract, bouncy and playful at the same time. Letterforms became illustrative elements to merge and stretch to push messaging that might be boring, and gave them a new life. I think thereâs a spirit in there that is birthed from a few pasts, and ultimately created something new.â Wit and Simplicity
âWe like to create typography with wit and simplicity,â says Katy. âThe M80 Project for a Firecracker Pizza & Beer is a perfect example. Too often, beverage branding tries to tell a story through overdesign and illustration. The branding of M80 beer says, âIâm a can of beer that looks like a stick of dynamite. Itâs not trying too hard â and it has wit.â Lubalin and Carnase Influences
Type as image, type as texture, type that frames, typographic compositions reminiscent of old badge work, typographic compositions reminiscent of psychedelia⦠thereâs really so many ways weâre seeing designers use type,â explains Milton. âAt the same time, thereâs some really beautiful simple use of type as wellâ¦minimal and airy. The typographic play in the Small Things poster is really an illustration of complexity and the innerworkings of the mundane not being so simple. The phrase itself is a calming life lesson; but the way the letterforms intersect, affect, and rely on each other is symbolic of how the universe works to make those moments come to life.â Branding and Super Families
âWe always look for super families when it comes to branding projects,â says Katy. âEven if we only use just a few cuts from the family. Large typeface families give our clients more flexibility and latitude when it comes to new applications for the brand â which always happens.â âWe also lean toward workhorse families that are accessible and have a lot of variety,â she continues. âIf the design has too much personality people get fatigued. Not a good thing with a brand.â Look to families like [Classic Grotesqueâ¢](, [Futura® Now](, [Helvetica]([® Now]( and [Macklinâ¢]( as excellent choices for large branding projects. The Bottom Line
âMy choices in typefaces,â says Milton, âdepends on what the work is needing. This need could vary between utility and emotive â or somewhere in between. Often times the choice is guided somewhere in the mix of what the typeface does and represents. Sometimes its clarity and clean boldness. Sometimes itâs mystery.â âAt TOKY,â says Katy, âwe always strive for design and typography that has personality, is authentic, and speaks to a brandâs core idea.â Shoot for one of the above â or a combination of the two â and you canât go wrong. Download a pdf version of the [Trends]( article and add it to your [bookmarks](. Typefaces used in this article [Boston Angel](
[Classic Grotesqueâ¢](
[Cooper Blackâ¢](
[Data 70](
[Futura® Now](
[Gazpacho](
[Helvetica® Now](
[Hobo]([®](
[Macklinâ¢](
[Quincy CF](
[Recoleta](
[Roberta](
[Rumble Brave Vintage Fonts](
[ITC Souvenir®](
[Windsorâ¢]( Monotype Imaging Inc.
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Cooper Black is a trademark of The Monotype Corporation and may be registered in certain jurisdictions.
Data 70 is a trademark of Monotype ITC Inc. and may be registered in certain jurisdictions.
Futura Now is a registered Trademark of Bauer Types.
Helvetica Now is a trademark of Monotype Imaging Inc. registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and may be registered in certain other jurisdictions.
Hobo is a trademark of Monotype GmbH registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and may be registered in certain other jurisdictions.
Macklin is a trademark of Monotype Imaging Inc. and may be registered in certain jurisdictions.
âRobertaâ is a trademark of profonts.
ITC Souvenir is a trademark of Monotype ITC Inc. registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and which may be registered in certain other jurisdictions.
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