FRANKENSTEIN TYPE

I thought it would be good to revisit the few weeks we spent earlier on in the year when looking at the anatomy of type and see if I approach this any differently and whether any cool letterforms come to fruition out of this process, it's interesting and surprisingly effective.

First I'm going to go around the internet and collect interesting letterforms so I have a nice catalogue of varied letterforms which I can cut, copy and resize to create something new.

I've chosen 5 letterforms, an uppercase and lowercase version of each letterform. I'm then going to create the same 5 letterforms again, but by using all uppercase and lowercase examples to collectively create 5 new letterforms.

























Here are the chosen letterforms, T, A, R, G and S. I'll now enlarge them at varying sizes so it helps me visualise them better at different sizes and gives me a better visual of how stems, serifs etc work at different sizes ready for me to cut and put together.












 



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