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	<title>FontStruct Gallery Feed (All FontStructions, Sorted by Rating)</title>
	<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/gallery/all/rating/descending/1/any_category/any_license/with_options/Lowercase</link>
	<description></description>
	<language>en-us</language>
	<pubDate>Tue, 24 Nov 2009 07:17:04 +0000</pubDate> 
	<lastBuildDate>Tue, 24 Nov 2009 07:17:04 +0000</lastBuildDate> 
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&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/235912/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Paige is a font in progress. Inspired by "Splatter" I made this font in about 2 hours. Please rate and comment. Soon I will make a lowercase set and special characters set to go with it.

If there are certain letters you dislike or you think really look bad please let me know. I have changed some characters already.

P.S. Nicole has a VERY sexy ass ;)	<item>
		<title>“Paige” by DefineYann</title>
		<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/235912</link>
		<description>&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/235912/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Paige is a font in progress. Inspired by "Splatter" I made this font in about 2 hours. Please rate and comment. Soon I will make a lowercase set and special characters set to go with it.

If there are certain letters you dislike or you think really look bad please let me know. I have changed some characters already.

P.S. Nicole has a VERY sexy ass ;)</description>
		<pubDate>Mon, 02 Nov 2009 11:56:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/235912</guid> 
	</item>
&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/241042/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Clone of Starflyer Demo 1 ~ Lowercase suggestions. 

J, W and Z and font-wide letter spacing and character metrics adjusted.

Pay special attention to the stroke contrast on the z, x, w, and s. If contrast is too low (or the thick stroke too thin), the lc will appear too dark or too light next to the caps, creating a disharmonious affect.

Alternate as included in the more latin Unicode zone.

Good work, Simon! You’re almost there!

:^)	<item>
		<title>“Starfokker ~ lc suggestions” by will.i.ૐ</title>
		<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/241042</link>
		<description>&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/241042/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Clone of Starflyer Demo 1 ~ Lowercase suggestions. 

J, W and Z and font-wide letter spacing and character metrics adjusted.

Pay special attention to the stroke contrast on the z, x, w, and s. If contrast is too low (or the thick stroke too thin), the lc will appear too dark or too light next to the caps, creating a disharmonious affect.

Alternate as included in the more latin Unicode zone.

Good work, Simon! You’re almost there!

:^)</description>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Oct 2009 21:14:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/241042</guid> 
	</item>
&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/229735/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A play on brickstacking, 'Brutal' is an experiment in creating a one brick fontstruction for multilayered screen printing. To use this font, you simply need to layer the uppercase alphabet on top of (or underneath) the lowercase alphabet (see below for a sample).
 
 

Obviously, it doesn't look like much in the Fontstruct preview.
 
 

The inspiration for this typeface came about when I was putting together this Flickr gallery of modular multi-colored lettering.
 
 

The first 25 downloads are all mine. It was a hard one to test.	<item>
		<title>“Brutal Exchange of a Smug for Some Faith” by afrojet</title>
		<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/229735</link>
		<description>&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/229735/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;A play on brickstacking, 'Brutal' is an experiment in creating a one brick fontstruction for multilayered screen printing. To use this font, you simply need to layer the uppercase alphabet on top of (or underneath) the lowercase alphabet (see below for a sample).
 
 

Obviously, it doesn't look like much in the Fontstruct preview.
 
 

The inspiration for this typeface came about when I was putting together this Flickr gallery of modular multi-colored lettering.
 
 

The first 25 downloads are all mine. It was a hard one to test.</description>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Nov 2009 01:00:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/229735</guid> 
	</item>
&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/256102/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This type face is inspired by creation i've saw on the web. she's working well but not at every size... There some kind of anthropi on screen. I've already create the uppercase, but i'm not able to download them, so i publish only the lowercase here. Zen	<item>
		<title>“paperface” by zen_killa</title>
		<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/256102</link>
		<description>&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/256102/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;This type face is inspired by creation i've saw on the web. she's working well but not at every size... There some kind of anthropi on screen. I've already create the uppercase, but i'm not able to download them, so i publish only the lowercase here. Zen</description>
		<pubDate>Sat, 14 Nov 2009 18:12:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/256102</guid> 
	</item>
&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/253743/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Another low-res, single-brick, lowercase alphabet. Uppercase and complete character set in progress.	<item>
		<title>“Havre” by fugitiveglue</title>
		<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/253743</link>
		<description>&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/253743/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Another low-res, single-brick, lowercase alphabet. Uppercase and complete character set in progress.</description>
		<pubDate>Tue, 10 Nov 2009 13:11:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/253743</guid> 
	</item>
&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/243763/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Clone of haxrcorpttf. All basic latin letters are in caps.

(basically only useful if you're using area o4.1 skin with haxrcorp font... otherwise just download the regular one since it has lowercase letters)	<item>
		<title>“Haxrcorpttf Caps” by Dimeq</title>
		<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/243763</link>
		<description>&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/243763/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Clone of haxrcorpttf. All basic latin letters are in caps.

(basically only useful if you're using area o4.1 skin with haxrcorp font... otherwise just download the regular one since it has lowercase letters)</description>
		<pubDate>Sun, 18 Oct 2009 19:50:23 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/243763</guid> 
	</item>
&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/232984/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Syzygy was an attempt to create a typeface of old style characters with a high contrast between thicks & thins and attractive curves, despite the inherent limitations of fonstruct’s available blocks. The end result is a highly readable typeface — even at smaller sizes — comprised entirely of straight lines. While the astronomical definition talks about alignment, the word “syzygy” more broadly means “the union of disparate or opposing object, ideas or concepts”. Thus, the name “syzygy” is meant to reference the merger between old-style letters and a modern, computer-driven design tool — truly a meeting of opposites.	<item>
		<title>“Syzygy” by aaronbell</title>
		<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/232984</link>
		<description>&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/232984/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Syzygy was an attempt to create a typeface of old style characters with a high contrast between thicks & thins and attractive curves, despite the inherent limitations of fonstruct’s available blocks. The end result is a highly readable typeface — even at smaller sizes — comprised entirely of straight lines. While the astronomical definition talks about alignment, the word “syzygy” more broadly means “the union of disparate or opposing object, ideas or concepts”. Thus, the name “syzygy” is meant to reference the merger between old-style letters and a modern, computer-driven design tool — truly a meeting of opposites.</description>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Nov 2009 09:20:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/232984</guid> 
	</item>
&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/205373/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Well, apparently everybody here likes building letters... And I'm sure everybody got told at least once to finally shut down that damn computer while fontstructing.
Here's how you can go on tinkering fonts even with the computer unplugged!;)

I had carried this idea around with me a long time ago, doing some sketches, but abandoning it cause I thought all the thin and dotted lines would go beyond fontstruct's possibilities. Until funk_king proved me wrong... Thanks for the re-inspiration!

I think this is pretty self-explaining. Cut along the solid lines, fold along the dotted lines and put some glue on the shaded parts, put it all together, and there you go with your new toys!

Unfortunately it was impossible to fill all the inner sides of all the counters, but I tried to leave them open where you'd see it least. There might also be some bugs, I haven't tried them out yet. Pure brainwork so far... (My brain's still in the freezer to cool down a bit) In case someone ever actually uses them and finds something wrong, please let me know!

Hope you like it!:)
Check out the fill font if you wanna print your own custom-made design on the letters!
Edit 5th August: Just copied the uppercase on the lowercase for reasons of convenience... I might add some alternates for some letters on the lowercase though, probably coming in September. Sorry, exam-time.;)	<item>
		<title>“Punched Out” by shasta</title>
		<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/205373</link>
		<description>&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/205373/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Well, apparently everybody here likes building letters... And I'm sure everybody got told at least once to finally shut down that damn computer while fontstructing.
Here's how you can go on tinkering fonts even with the computer unplugged!;)

I had carried this idea around with me a long time ago, doing some sketches, but abandoning it cause I thought all the thin and dotted lines would go beyond fontstruct's possibilities. Until funk_king proved me wrong... Thanks for the re-inspiration!

I think this is pretty self-explaining. Cut along the solid lines, fold along the dotted lines and put some glue on the shaded parts, put it all together, and there you go with your new toys!

Unfortunately it was impossible to fill all the inner sides of all the counters, but I tried to leave them open where you'd see it least. There might also be some bugs, I haven't tried them out yet. Pure brainwork so far... (My brain's still in the freezer to cool down a bit) In case someone ever actually uses them and finds something wrong, please let me know!

Hope you like it!:)
Check out the fill font if you wanna print your own custom-made design on the letters!
Edit 5th August: Just copied the uppercase on the lowercase for reasons of convenience... I might add some alternates for some letters on the lowercase though, probably coming in September. Sorry, exam-time.;)</description>
		<pubDate>Tue, 03 Nov 2009 14:05:19 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/205373</guid> 
	</item>
&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/235910/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The &#8216;Sans Serious&#8217; Series is a group of tribute typefaces meant to honor Dutch designer and typographer Jurriaan Schrofer.
 
 

Along with Wim Crouwel and Josef Albers, Jurrian Schrofer (1926 - 1990) was among the Bauhaus pioneers of grid-based modular typography and design. 
 
 

Schrofer's work experimented with type, light, and color and focused on mathematical shapes and pattern.
 
 

From the book &#8216;Dutch Type&#8217; by Jan Middendorp:
 
 

&#8220;Schrofer made several attempts to create complete typefaces - one of which was wittily called Sans serious - but this was never his goal. &#8216;Is it necessary&#8217;, he wrote, &#8216;to make complete alphabets with upper- and lowercase, figures, diacritics and seriously adorned with a name, when the aim is merely a formal investigation into basic recipes&#8217; Schrofer's domain was never the design of typographic alphabets, to be used by other designers, but always the creation of letterforms &#8216;made to measure&#8217; as part of his own designs of - mainly - book covers and postage stamps. He created a rectangular alphabet as the basic element of his ever-changing covers - each based of the same grid but colored differently - for a series of scientific books, &#8216;Les textes sociologiques&#8217; from Mouton Publishers. He made sophisticated pixel-based letters, all drawn by hand, and experimented with photographic screens as a means of distinguishing simplified letterforms from the background. He created logotypes built from custom-made letterforms, based on rectangular grids.&#8221;
 
 

&#8220;In his booklet &#8216;Letters op maat&#8217; (&#8216;Type made to measure&#8217;, 1987), Schrofer presented many of his experimental alphabets from the 1960s and '70s. The booklet was part of a series of goodwill publications edited by Wim Crouwel for Lecturis Printers, Eindhoven.&#8221;
 
 

Read more from &#8216;Dutch Type&#8217;.
 
 

Image from Letters op matt.
 
 

More images of Jurriaan Schrofer's work on Flickr:
 
 

Schrofer in Total Design book.
 
 

Cover for European Journal of Social Psycology
 
 

Museumjournaal, design Jurriaan Schrofer
 
 

Die Internationale Avant-Garde
 
 

Jurriaan Schrofer - Fodor catalog
 
 

Note: for all fonts in the &#8216;Sans Serious&#8217; Series, the alphabet is the same for upper and lowercase.	<item>
		<title>“Sans Serious I” by afrojet</title>
		<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/235910</link>
		<description>&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/235910/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The &#8216;Sans Serious&#8217; Series is a group of tribute typefaces meant to honor Dutch designer and typographer Jurriaan Schrofer.
 
 

Along with Wim Crouwel and Josef Albers, Jurrian Schrofer (1926 - 1990) was among the Bauhaus pioneers of grid-based modular typography and design. 
 
 

Schrofer's work experimented with type, light, and color and focused on mathematical shapes and pattern.
 
 

From the book &#8216;Dutch Type&#8217; by Jan Middendorp:
 
 

&#8220;Schrofer made several attempts to create complete typefaces - one of which was wittily called Sans serious - but this was never his goal. &#8216;Is it necessary&#8217;, he wrote, &#8216;to make complete alphabets with upper- and lowercase, figures, diacritics and seriously adorned with a name, when the aim is merely a formal investigation into basic recipes&#8217; Schrofer's domain was never the design of typographic alphabets, to be used by other designers, but always the creation of letterforms &#8216;made to measure&#8217; as part of his own designs of - mainly - book covers and postage stamps. He created a rectangular alphabet as the basic element of his ever-changing covers - each based of the same grid but colored differently - for a series of scientific books, &#8216;Les textes sociologiques&#8217; from Mouton Publishers. He made sophisticated pixel-based letters, all drawn by hand, and experimented with photographic screens as a means of distinguishing simplified letterforms from the background. He created logotypes built from custom-made letterforms, based on rectangular grids.&#8221;
 
 

&#8220;In his booklet &#8216;Letters op maat&#8217; (&#8216;Type made to measure&#8217;, 1987), Schrofer presented many of his experimental alphabets from the 1960s and '70s. The booklet was part of a series of goodwill publications edited by Wim Crouwel for Lecturis Printers, Eindhoven.&#8221;
 
 

Read more from &#8216;Dutch Type&#8217;.
 
 

Image from Letters op matt.
 
 

More images of Jurriaan Schrofer's work on Flickr:
 
 

Schrofer in Total Design book.
 
 

Cover for European Journal of Social Psycology
 
 

Museumjournaal, design Jurriaan Schrofer
 
 

Die Internationale Avant-Garde
 
 

Jurriaan Schrofer - Fodor catalog
 
 

Note: for all fonts in the &#8216;Sans Serious&#8217; Series, the alphabet is the same for upper and lowercase.</description>
		<pubDate>Mon, 23 Nov 2009 15:06:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/235910</guid> 
	</item>
&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/200434/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Well, everyone sure seemed to like Masheenury but there were some pleadings for some punctuation to go with.  So here's one not only with punctuation but with the lowercase letters as well.  Hope ya like.	<item>
		<title>“Masheensmith” by vertigokid</title>
		<link>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/200434</link>
		<description>&lt;img src="http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/get_preview/200434/1" alt="" /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Well, everyone sure seemed to like Masheenury but there were some pleadings for some punctuation to go with.  So here's one not only with punctuation but with the lowercase letters as well.  Hope ya like.</description>
		<pubDate>Fri, 30 Oct 2009 00:18:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://fontstruct.fontshop.com/fontstructions/show/200434</guid> 
	</item>
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