See more:
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/361689/tangs
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/1634096/prickly-pear-2-1
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/134355/arko
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/68838/offcuts
Recreation of the primary pixel font from Sin-Nihon Laser Soft/Telenet Japan/NEC's "Last Alert" (aka "Red Alert", 1989) on the PC Engine/TurboGrafx-16.
Only the characters present in the game's tile set have been included.
Experimenting with a new letter concept. This is not the final concept of course, but I developed this along the way, so I kept it.
For best results, use upper and lower case on seperate layers, then merge them together.
STANDAARD PROFIELEN ― Digital revival/extrapolation of a logotype originally designed by "Jurriaan Schrofer"
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Jurriaan's original work is a logotype style lettering for a corporate identity brochure, that he designed for one of his clients, a Dutch timber trading company called: "Houthandel Rote - Westzaan N.V."
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Schrofer's original work featured the plain black text "standaard profielen" and was written in all lowercase letters. (source image bellow)
As far as I know this were the only characters he designed for this specific project.
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It's a very simple grid based modular brick type lettering. Only two bricks were used to create each individual letterform. So they have a profound and inevitably dictating resonance to the visual appearance of the letterforms, a visual presence that I could not stray away from too far.
This stylistical design parameter made it somewhat extra tricky for the successfully faithful extrapolation of the remaining missing glyphs, turning it into a complete glyph-set and basic usable font. The source also remains pretty unclear on how Jurriaan would've designed characters with crossing strokes, such as Kk / Xx.
The original corner brick works well with just this small character set in the source, but the rectangular outside part of this brick fills a substantial surface area, (over 3/4th of a brick in total), resulting in bleeding-like contrast issues. So, having mostly undesirable effects in brick-congested areas or with intersecting strokes.
An additional beveled corner brick was added to address most of this issue.
All 'n all, for this reason I just captured its basic lowercase letterforms, numerals and only the bare essential punctuation marks for making it functional are included for now, no accents !
Cheers!
Asymmetrical alien techno stencil.
This uses some experimental techniques, of course, but I'm not sure how to concisely explain those. Let's just say that each type of line bend and line connection has a rule associated with it. These get naturally modified by the structural asymmetry the font has so that simple rules appear in many forms and variations.
By request, an abstract, condensed, and slightly futuristic thinliner stencil.
This is similar to a fusion of "Migrator" and "Aegris Outline".
The metrics for this one are not finalized yet. Various versions of this are being tried out, and the feedback will affect how this font changes. (Presently, the overall spacing is a bit wider than the internal spacing of glyphs like “”).
What suposed to be a revival of the "1957 Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven Brabant" poster, original work by Wim Crouwel, actually failed terribly since I never peeked at the original while I made this (thought i had it well preserved in my memory, but seems I did not).
Nonetheless It isn't a bad font I guess, so...
Enjoy!
Clone of Tirrel (by Doug Peters). Copyright 2019 Doug Peters.
This version has the 'soft' alternates. These are the lowercase characters in 'Tirrel'. The idea is that if someone is used to using the shift key and only wants the softer style of the font, they can use this version and they will only get all the caps versions of Tirrel whether they use shift or caps lock (or not).
Categories: Monospaced Sans/Stencil.
Types: White Space, Striped, Display Caps, Logotype, & Novelty.
Weight: Bold.
Web font: Yeah, sure.
Commercial use: Yes.
Derivatives: No.
Redistribution: No.
https://www.Doug-Peters.com
https://Dougs.Work
https://SymbioticDesign.com
https://Worthful.com
https://Font-Journal.com
My best Domain Name registration service:
https://www.DomainHostmaster.com
My best web hosting solution:
https://HDWebHosting.com
PayPal donations (to encourage my continued design efforts):
https://paypal.me/sitedesigner
Clone of Tirrel (by Doug Peters). Copyright 2019 Doug Peters.
This version has the 'hard' alternates. These are the caps in 'Tirrel'. The idea is that if someone is used to using the shift key and only wants the harder style of the font, they can use this version and they will get all the caps versions of Tirrel whether they use shift or caps lock (or not).
Categories: Monospaced Sans/Stencil.
Types: White Space, Striped, Display Caps, Logotype, & Novelty.
Weight: Heavy Bold.
Web font: Yeah, sure.
Commercial use: Yes.
Derivatives: No.
Redistribution: No.
https://www.Doug-Peters.com
https://Dougs.Work
https://SymbioticDesign.com
https://Worthful.com
https://Font-Journal.com
My best Domain Name registration service:
https://www.DomainHostmaster.com
My best web hosting solution:
https://HDWebHosting.com
PayPal donations (to encourage my continued design efforts):
https://paypal.me/sitedesigner
Tirrel font is Copyright 2019 Doug Peters.
This is the original version of Tirrel. Although a display caps font, the uppercase has a hard, bold, brash version of capitals while the lowercase holds the 'softer' alternates with more defined characters. If you only want one or the other and have the habit of using shift (or caps lock), there should be two other versions of this font accompanying it, one "Tirrel Hard" and the other Tirrel Soft" to relieve frustration of those who type well.
Categories: Monospaced Sans/Stencil.
Types: White Space, Striped, Display Caps, Logotype, & Novelty.
Weight: Heavy Bold.
Web font: Yeah, sure.
Commercial use: Yes.
Derivatives: No.
Redistribution: No.
https://www.Doug-Peters.com
https://Dougs.Work
https://SymbioticDesign.com
https://Worthful.com
https://Font-Journal.com
My best Domain Name registration service:
https://www.DomainHostmaster.com
My best web hosting solution:
https://HDWebHosting.com
PayPal donations (to encourage my continued design efforts):
https://paypal.me/sitedesigner
Here is my take on Scaffo Stencil.
This is a clone of Scaffo Stencil