The post These Artists are Acing the Art of Typography appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>Lauren Hom’s work is both playful and striking, attracting brands like Starbucks, Google, AT&T, YouTube, TIME Magazine, and Microsoft, among many others. “I’ve been lettering for four years and they still bamboozle me all the time,” she admitted in an interview with Dumb Questions. Her work is printed on anything from cards to murals, but you can also catch some of her designs on her Instagram page.
Australian artist Gemma O’Brien specializes in lettering, illustration, and installation. But the multi-talented artist is best recognized for her bold typeface and expressive calligraphy. Her work is featured in advertising campaigns, editorial publications, and large-scale murals around the world. “There’s a lot of type designers who are designing the fonts that we need to read efficiently,” she explained in an interview with 99U Magazine. “My work is more in this category of looking at words and thinking of them as art or bringing them into a picture as themselves.”
Heather Hardison’s work is a hybrid of digital and analog. Specializing in food illustration and sign painting, she enjoys fuzing her passions together through murals and food packaging. “I think that it’s important for all designers to be good at drawing, even if their work is completely digital,” she told The Design Kids.
The post These Artists are Acing the Art of Typography appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post British Graffiti Artist Creates Impressive Multi-Layered 3D Typographies appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>“Since then I have pushed and experimented with this idea of overlapping words, seeing how many I can fit into the space of one word, and then slowly boiling it down and simplifying this idea to become more legible,” – he recently told Colossal. “This in turn lead more to the use of ‘typography’ throughout my style as you see today. I have always been interested in the idea of graffiti speaking to the general public, rather than just other graffiti writers, and readable letters or a more ‘typographic’ approach has been a good route to that.”
You can check out some of his works below.
The post British Graffiti Artist Creates Impressive Multi-Layered 3D Typographies appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post These Artists are Acing the Art of Typography appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>Lauren Hom’s work is both playful and striking, attracting brands like Starbucks, Google, AT&T, YouTube, TIME Magazine, and Microsoft, among many others. “I’ve been lettering for four years and they still bamboozle me all the time,” she admitted in an interview with Dumb Questions. Her work is printed on anything from cards to murals, but you can also catch some of her designs on her Instagram page.
Australian artist Gemma O’Brien specializes in lettering, illustration, and installation. But the multi-talented artist is best recognized for her bold typeface and expressive calligraphy. Her work is featured in advertising campaigns, editorial publications, and large-scale murals around the world. “There’s a lot of type designers who are designing the fonts that we need to read efficiently,” she explained in an interview with 99U Magazine. “My work is more in this category of looking at words and thinking of them as art or bringing them into a picture as themselves.”
Heather Hardison’s work is a hybrid of digital and analog. Specializing in food illustration and sign painting, she enjoys fuzing her passions together through murals and food packaging. “I think that it’s important for all designers to be good at drawing, even if their work is completely digital,” she told The Design Kids.
The post These Artists are Acing the Art of Typography appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>The post British Graffiti Artist Creates Impressive Multi-Layered 3D Typographies appeared first on PlayJunkie.
]]>“Since then I have pushed and experimented with this idea of overlapping words, seeing how many I can fit into the space of one word, and then slowly boiling it down and simplifying this idea to become more legible,” – he recently told Colossal. “This in turn lead more to the use of ‘typography’ throughout my style as you see today. I have always been interested in the idea of graffiti speaking to the general public, rather than just other graffiti writers, and readable letters or a more ‘typographic’ approach has been a good route to that.”
You can check out some of his works below.
The post British Graffiti Artist Creates Impressive Multi-Layered 3D Typographies appeared first on PlayJunkie.
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