Showing posts with label vernacular typography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vernacular typography. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Typographic Triangulation

Felt pennants with names of colleges or sports teams are what come to mind when I think of graduated type set within a triangle. I have no idea if the ‘pennant’ was ever a popular format for signs, but since there are only two examples in Manhattan that I know of, it’s clearly not very common today.
The 35th St. vintage metal awning of The New Yorker Hotel is one, with thin, art deco-style letters, set against a black background.

The other is a Laundromat on West 79th St. with black mod/deco letters on bright yellow.

Last year I saw some triangular Kiosco awnings in Buenos Aires.


I just want to add here that the graduated lettering on the metal awning is only one of several type styles to be found on the structure of the New Yorker Hotel. I have no doubt that a good sleuth could find enough typographic evidence to piece together the building’s entire 80-year history.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Unscratched Lottery Cards: I Love My Life The Way It Is

Israeli lottery cards.

Eight years ago Ali Alvarez of the UK committed a willful act of defiant anticapitalism--she did not scratch a scratch-off lottery card. And she’s been not scratching ever since.

In her own words ...
There's something about the whole lottery thing that doesn't feel right to me - getting your hopes high, dreaming, escaping, and then usually being let down.

This happens to me on a daily basis WITHOUT the lottery's help, muchas gracias. So as an experiment, I started buying scratch cards and not scratching them.

It felt funny.

Then I showed it to a few people. It made them feel funny.

It made me think... "I think I'm onto something here."

I couldn't agree more. Such a simple concept—she doesn’t even do anything—and yet, so subversive.

Ali hopes to amass 8,000 tickets—enough to fill a 12 x12 foot space, floor to ceiling, as an art installation. Folks have been sending her scratch-off lottery cards from all over the world, and wouldn't you know, cheesy lottery design is, for the most part, universal. There are a few standouts, however, that have a bit of regional differentiation …


Lithuania


Australia


New York


Canada


Switzerland


Stockholm


UK


Barcelona


Zurich


Oslo


Lisbon


UK


Louisiana


Texas


Check out 'I Love My Life the Way it is'to see where you can send Ali cool lottery cards for her to leave unscratched.

Friday, July 23, 2010

Just My Type 2

These three images ended up somehow in the same folder. I kind of like them together!
POULTRY: Serving dish from the Etsy site Blue Bell Bazaar. It's from a while back and seems to have been sold.

COTE D'AZUR: Book of views from a German bookseller. Also from a while back and gone now.

STOP: Jersey Street, behind the Puck Building in NYC. I believe the street is only two blocks long. It goes from Crosby St., across Lafayette, and ends at Mulberry St. It really is more like an alley than a full fledged street.


The first Just My Type post

Monday, June 21, 2010

Floating Identities

I passed a marina the other day here on the East Coast and was disappointed to see names like ‘Great Escape’ and ‘Mr. Chips.’ What a let down after the brash self-branding I found myself documenting in Southern California a while back …









Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Hoboken Impromptu

Spontaneous mini-vacation yesterday afternoon in Hoboken, NJ. The weather was glorious, and the city was in full bloom.

If this wisteria bunting doesn’t secure a tenant, I don’t know what will.


Vestiges of pre-gentrification …


A typographic identity crisis.
Restored ceiling of the historic Elysian Cafe.

Wavy wrought iron and a pair of watchful bees.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Monday, January 11, 2010

Vans of a Thousand Faces

It’s an age old question: How many fonts fit on the side of contractor’s vehicle?






p.s. For vehicular typography at the complete opposite end of the spectrum, you must visit Jonathan Turner’s Autografik set on flickr, which is “dedicated to graphic design applied to motor vehicles. With a focus on modernist corporate identities of the 60's and 70's.”
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