![]() ![]() The OFL allows the licensed fonts to be used, studied, modified and redistributed freely as long as they are not sold by themselves. The goals of the Open Font License (OFL) are to stimulate worldwide development of collaborative font projects, to support the font creation efforts of academic and linguistic communities, and to provide a free and open framework in which fonts may be shared and improved in partnership with others. SIL OPEN FONT LICENSE Version 1.1 - 26 February 2007 This license is copied below, and is also available with a FAQ at: This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. I hope this tutorial on how to create a hand-lettered font was helpful.Copyright 2011 The Montserrat Project Authors ( ) If you want to watch a video course on how to create your own hand-drawn font, come check out my course on Skillshare! ![]() Get the first one "out of the way", per se, which can help you learn the workflow as well as learn things for future font design. Congratulations, you made your very own hand-drawn font!īy this point, you may have your own font by using Illustrator and Glyphs! Things can only get better from here.ĭo you want to make your own font, but you feel stuck? I highly recommend just diving in. Take note of any letters that need to be moved or if one set of characters needs to be kerned differently. Install it like you would any other font and play around with it in Photoshop and Word or similar applications. Now that your font is beautifully kerned, you can export it and test it for real. Learn more tips here.Īfter a lot of tweaking, you'll have a list of kerning specifications in your Kerning Panel. To kern, click between each letter and use CMD+OPTION Left/Right on a Mac or CTRL+ALT Left/Right on a PC. ![]() You can see how awkward the spacing was for these letters before I kerned them. You can also hit CMD+OPTION+F for built-in testing pairs. In order to do this, double-click on a letter and then type in various words to test them. Turns out that was wrong AND a huge time waster, and that is not what I'm about at. In the first version of this tutorial, I talked about exporting and testing your font over and over again to work on kerning. It's what makes your font have the extra polish that other fonts may not have, and really becomes the pivotal point for attention-to-detail that goes into designing your own font. Kerning. It's the part of the font design process where you specify the distance between specific letter pairs. Set your font’s kerning within Glyphs App When you're done, highlight all of your glyphs in the app (CMD+A) and change the LSB and RSB (left and right side bearing) in the bottom-left settings. Open and close each letter and symbol until you've copied and pasted each glyph from Illustrator. Move up all of your letters and their bounding boxes up 750px (by typing -750px in the y axis field) to make it easier to copy and paste into Glyphs App in the next step. Now each individual letter with its bounding box is on its own layer. With all of your letters selected, resize them to 1000x1000px. Select all of your items and then use Release To Layers (sequence) in the Layers window drop down. Use the align tool to move all of your letters to the top-left position (so each corner lines up at 0,0) Use the move and copy tool (CMD+SHIFT+M) and repeat tool (CMD+D) to make sure each of these boxes are precise. Repeat until your letters are positioned correctly.ĭraw a 100x100px box around each letter (no stroke or fill value). Move each letter to line up with the correct grid subdivisions. Sketching on graph paper is a great way to keep your letterforms organized.įor starters, it's a good rule of thumb to have 4 equal heights each for the ascender, x-height, and descender.ĭraw each letter carefully and re-draw letters and characters that you aren't happy with.Įach letter will be no more than 100px square, so each major block will be space for one letter. I recommend starting with a lettering style that you already use in your own illustrations or hand lettering projects. When I was trying to decide, I went for my go-to doodle-y hand-lettering style. Glyphs App (I used the free demo for my first font, and purchased Glyphs Mini after that)įinding the style of your font can be the hardest place to start. ![]() Sakura Pigma Graphic 1 Pen or a similar inking marker or pen ( my favorites) Here are the tools and software I recommend for the hand lettering part of your journey, as well as the digitizing process: I spent a whopping 9 hours on this first font from sketch to export, and since then it's taken me significantly less time with each new font. Now, I'm going to help YOU learn how to create your own font and save hours of research and speed bumps. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |