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Hanzi (2016)
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I think the most important aspect about fonts is that they convey words If you ask students why they use a certain font most students don't know the answer When I used Word, I used to pick whatever font I wanted to use Which ever I liked was fine I thought that as long as I bold this thin looking font the characters can be used as heading font It's absolutely not the case Strictly speaking, not many people pay attention to fonts Most people only care whether the words show up on paper During former President Obama's presidential campaign in 2008 he used the font Gotham font It was the first time a candidate paid such attention to fonts The inspiration of this design came from the fonts on shop signs in Manhattan it's a font originated from urban America One thing I love about living in Taiwan or Hong Kong is I walk down the street and there's all these ads And I like them Why do I, it's not really I like the ads really Is that I like the Chinese characters I think they look nice They make everything look nicer Fonts are all around us and they require design Looking at them You might not be able to understand how incredible fonts are But when you write them you'll find out how much work the font designers put into them When you study the stories behind fonts You'll discover that these fonts they really exist for particular reasons There's a purpose for its elaborateness When you explore these reasons you'll find out that human beings encounter many problems in life the process of solving these problems is expressed in something as insignificant as fonts That's the most interesting part Allow me to give you guys a briefing on why we're here today many fonts can be spotted in public This calligraphy is called Weibei font Weibei comes in many types Many Weibei computer fonts are based on this original version allowing users to apply to multiple situations hence the font can't be as freely formed as its calligraphy version This is a basic difference between fonts and calligraphy Traditional glass doors were hand-painted vinyl cutting wasn't available in the past, so paint was used Usually the reversed text was painted in gold on the other side then a red contour was applied So this is a pretty traditional style Even though this is already a vinyl cutting, they kept the old design The "Chaoyang" sign you can see right there It's in Mingti and painted by a signage artisan The style is pretty interesting For example, the left part of the right character It's not round, but instead more angular this is different from the Mingti we usually see making it a unique design You can check out the conventional Mingti on the iPad I like to use shop signs as an introduction to font knowledge A Chinese Font Walk appeals to young people's curiosity about their surroundings We often see fonts in public spaces We might care when or where a font is used However, letting people forget about its existence should be a font's natural state For example, you would only look at signs when you're looking for an escape door in a hotel How to use a font For example what kind of font to use for headings or what kind of font to use for texts In the past most people didn't have any idea, so they used them incorrectly You might have heard that the Taoyuan International Airport uses Times New Roman for their signs This is a result of a lack of education My name is Joe and I'm an independent type designer also a graphic designer I studied Type & Media at the Royal Academy of Art The Hague I started noticing fonts when I was in college Hip Hop culture was popular at the time So there were lots of dancing, street dancing Rap, and Hip Hop music I began to pay attention to graffiti abroad and learned how they change the style of text I got my Masters at the Kyoto University of Arts and Design I was able to learn font design at school This was our textbook Japanese textbooks teaches the history of both Roman and Chinese characters It even talks about some basic application on typesetting and font design I learned a lot and started to think about when you're doing graphic design Why do you use particular fonts? If you want me to explain within 10 seconds how different fonts create mood I can show you this book with two cat pictures It uses the terrifying Koin-tai font portrays the grouchy cat on the left while a calm cat is portrayed by a delicate styled font You understand immediately by looking at the cover This is an example of creating mood with fonts Fonts are like actors Let's say a graphic designer A graphic designer is like a director and selecting fonts is like selecting actors There are no good or bad actors, only if they're a good fit for the role In general most people don't care what kind of font is used as long as the printed product is good Moveble type printing is the foundation of all designs Typesetting is an important introduction to learning design Printing techniques came first Slowly the demand for more refined printing appeared then came the emergence of aesthetics and font design or font design guidelines That's how the demand for font design was born Around May or June of 2014 I got a phone call The director of Taipei National University of the Arts Museum called me Some scholars from the UK wanted to visit Ri Xing Type Foundry They've heard about us digitizing the fonts while repairing our copperplate printing press They asked now that you've digitalized the fonts, why did you keep the copperplates and transform the foundry to a technology museum? I told them That's because it's letterpress printing and the printed results are vastly different compared to modern printing To me, even though the font is the same The product we get from different printing styles differ greatly That's worth preserving Letterpress in Europe is also a declining industry but their design students still need to learn about letterpress in their first or second year in university On a whim I offered a set of Chinese type as a gift for their students' studies They were shocked Because they didn't know, until their visit that a set of Chinese type had such vast quantities and was so massive in size Movable type printing is officially called letterpress printing There are four types of printing Apart from movable type printing or letterpress printing there is also intaglio printing which is used mostly in printing money in our daily life Then there is stencil printing which is also called screen printing that prints the patterns on T-shirts The last one is the currently mainstream offset printing It is also called offset lithography which is a method of mixed water and ink printing The difference between movable type printing and this kind of offset printing is that the latter directly presses the ink on paper without the mixed water and ink printing process That's the major difference When it comes to China's printing technology it was closely related to the development of Buddhism It began with Buddhist monk XuanZang's travel to the West to obtain Buddhist Sutras He started his journey in 629AD and returned to China in 645AD Spreading Buddhism relies on religious scriptures and statues To become a printed text the script must be easy to read thus the earliest printed font is Kaiti In order to achieve easier carving and better efficiency in printing neater arrangement between the characters the style and structure of Kaiti was regularized It gradually evolved toward thinner horizontal strokes and thicker vertical strokes and became the predecessor of the current Songti But actually The most commonly used modern printing fonts Heiti and Yuanti came from the Songti that was introduced to Japan Japan redesigned the Songti, and as a result Yuanti and Heiti were born They became very important printed fonts aiding the passing down of knowledge My name is Nikhil Sonnad, I'm a reporter at Quartz I work on stories to do with data and also language I have a particular interest in the Chinese language So the evolution of Chinese character goes all the way back to the 11th or 13th BC that's the earliest characters that we know So the earliest known characters are what's known as oracle bones These characters were etched onto the bones of animals What would happen is ancient Chinese Kings will have some questions about whether we should invade a neighbor or whether we'll have a good harvest this year And they would ask their priests or their soothsayers to ask the gods or ask nature what the answer to this question would be What they would do is they would etch these questions physically onto the bones of animals or to the bellies of turtles They would heat these up and then cracks would form when they got hot enough And then what the soothsayers will do is interpret how these cracks show Yes we will get a good harvest or yes we should invade The next big step that happened was during the Qin, the original Qin Dynasty which the mythos behind it was that this emperor took disparate scripts from all over China and unified them into one script It's actually quite interesting because the characters are completely recognizable to a modern Chinese reader There's one big change that has happened since then which was in the 1950s the communist party simplified the script But that simplified script is used in mainland China but the traditional script is still used in Hong Kong and Taiwan So that's really a straight line between right now and about 5~700AD My name is Mo-Li Bai I've been learning Mandarin at National Taiwan University for more than a year Most of the time we need to spend roughly an hour or two practicing writing a day The way I learn Chinese is that if I needed to go to the supermarket I would use my phone to find out how to pronounce peanut butter in Chinese in order to find it at the supermarket That's how I started learning Chinese Most foreigners I don't think really know what to do with Chinese characters and I think most Chinese teachers don't really know what to do with people that want to learn Chinese characters because They tend to look at the problem like teaching Taiwanese kids because that's what they did as themselves when they learned Why did I want to learn Chinese well I always tell people I didn't chose Chinese, Chinese chose me Hi I'm Ash, Outlier linguistic solutions We're currently working on a new way to learn Chinese characters that's both consistent with the nature of characters themselves and also based on the latest research into the origin and evolution of Chinese characters Here at Outlier, we all learn Chinese characters as adults We know the pain, we know the suffering We know how much struggle it takes to get from not knowing any characters at all to being able to read a page of text in Chinese comfortably I was getting my undergraduate degree at the time so I was doing physics and math and all that stuff And everyday when I do my homework in my mind's eyes all I could see was this book about Chinese on my bookshelf and one day I just picked it up and started learning Chinese characters Basically because I used to watch kungfu movies as a kid and I just thought characters were cool looking A lot of people ask me "Oh, Chinese is hard" I said no it's not hard, it can't be too hard Can you think of any other language which has been used, spread, communicated more than 1 billion people in the world over 3000 years? I can't think of any other languages I was actually interested in journalism through learning Chinese just kind of interesting path I was studying Mandarin in Taiwan and I wanted to find a way that I could use those language skills to tell stories about what's happening in other parts of the world That's what let me to pursue journalism My methods for learning Chinese is the same method that I would tell anyone who's trying to learn any language Which is try to understand the etymology behind the word sort of You need some sort of a system to be able to understand why this word is set up the way that it is So the same way that you're studying English, you should understand something like The word philosophy for example is a combination of "philos" which means love and "sophism" which means knowledge So you should be able to combine these types of etymologies together and that's how I really approached Chinese when I was learning it Characters components once you understand what they mean on their own whether it's water, or speech or something like that, you can really improve your ability to remember the characters and make up little narratives of them for yourself The word for beautiful which is pronounced as "mei" And there's a traditional saying about this character in Chinese it's "Da yang Wei mei", meaning big sheep is beautiful. Well I just can't imagine these ancient scholars sitting there looking for a way to write the word beautiful and the first thing he thinks of is big sheep I mean it just doesn't sound right I was very relieved to find out when I studied paleography, that actually This is actually "da" which is a picture of a person standing and they drew a headdress So actually, the original version of "Mei" is a person wearing a headdress which is a more sensible presentation of the notion of "beauty" Now the way They drew the headdress looks similar to this Which is actually the ancient form of "yang" So eventually they started writing it as "yang" which is why it's appears as "yang" here My name is ShaoLan, Hsueh ShaoLan Shao means dawn, Ian is the mist in the mountains So I'm the mist in the mountains in the morning I'm the founder and creator of Chineasy Chineasy is a movement to empower people to understand the most widely used language of the world I would like people to understand China, Chinese culture and Chinese language without lost in translation Look, this means person It's not very easy to remember is it? But try now See? As a picture, it's much more memorable The character for big is like a person stretching their arms wide saying "it was this big!" And of course, a big person is an adult Or take tree Here it is. Two means woods three means forest I spoke at TED in less than 6 minutes, I demonstrated how you could learn 45 characters In English, what you see is what you get Speaking and reading is a different matter for Chinese So a lot of very basic day to day words in speaking are actually very hard to write And this is because speaking and reading are two different type of skills to acquire But Chinese, in a way, is much simpler Because the grammar in Chinese it's so simple There's no tense, there's no gender For example if I say "I drink coffee" In English you say "I am drinking coffee" "I will be drinking coffee" "I have drunk coffee" "I was drinking coffee" "I had have .I have had had ...drunk coffee" In Chinese there's no such thing It's just "I drink coffee" To know when You say today, yesterday, 1 hour ago, or tomorrow That's it And there's no gender, there's no he or she That's why when you speak to a lot of Chinese native speakers They often mix he or she because in our language we don't have such thing Living both in Taiwan and UK, I feel like home in both places and they're very different in a way and at the same time they are very similar Both are small islands and both have rich culture and history both have very deep languages We keep the family unit very tight and we have We both need to think far ahead because We're such small islands with limited resources We always have to globalize We always have to think big Walking on the streets in Taiwan, I noticed a lot of fonts like Kaiti and Leiti They're used a lot on the streets The signs on the streets are not just Kaiti and Leiti Some handwritten signs even use mixed fonts I find that very fascinating I really like these things so I took a lot of pictures My name is Akira Kobayashi I'm a Roman letter font designer I design Roman letters in Germany One of the most memorable things I'd like to use the Clifford font as an example It was the first Roman letter font I designed At the time, I was also working on other fonts But this font was the reason why I went independent Therefore I have a close emotional tie with it I'm Akira Kobayashi, how are you? Thank you These two words are the limits of my Chinese so I'll speak in Japanese from now I believe you must have used Times New Roman before as it is a very easy-to-read font We're not trying to compare fonts here, but Times New Roman really doesn't have any excessive emotions in it That's why it is used in news and commentary that don't require emotions The Clifford font is used when people need to convey their emotions or make sure their feelings are noticed It took me four years to design it An American designer wrote a letter to me He's a book designer And has been designing since the letterpress printing era He believes that letterpress has many beautiful fonts But digital fonts leave a lot to be desired Only a few can be used on book design, the situation is problematic When he saw Clifford, it caught his eye So he used Clifford in his book designs The result was excellent, so he wrote to thank me He must have really liked the results to have sent the letter Both Hanzi and Roman letters share a common aspect, which is the beauty of their lines They both must express the beauty of characters During the first 30 minutes Mr. Akira Kobayashi will demonstrate Roman letter calligraphy Please follow his demonstration and practice writing After that two artisans will demonstrate what they want you to learn today Today we'll be learning signage calligraphy with the signage artisans also I'd like to take this opportunity to practice lettering with upper case Roman letters As a sample I'm showing This is the form of Roman letters 2000 years ago Traditional Roman fonts we use today For example fonts like Garamond The axis of O is tipped this way It's tipped by 30 degrees You've done a great job When a character is enlarged, the beauty of the lines is very apparent As well as the character's space I tend to pay attention to the blank part The blank part includes the overall sense of coordination Regardless of whether they are Japanese, Hanzi or Roman letters As long as the blank part is well-coordinated the character will look beautiful When you walk on the streets of Japan Yuanti dominates the signs There must be a reason That's why I asked the signage artisans I went on the streets and interviewed many signage artisans And asked them to demonstrate the signage writing process Then I realized Yuanti is much easier to write than Heiti And so I was able to get an answer We'll be doing signage lettering from here on and since the strokes are used differently from Roman lettering We would like to demonstrate the strokes first so you might be able to understand it better Mr. Kobayashi suggest we start with the word signage "kanban" Because the two characters of "kanban" contain diagonal lines, horizontal lines and vertical lines you'll be able to see the writing technique of each stroke What you can see from a screen is function Language on screens are for function Handwriting doesn't represent function; instead, it conveys personality It represents personal feelings which can only be expressed by you as a person For example, we walk at a constant pace When we write we also have our own comfortable rhythm as well In order to master the rhythm, writing by hand is very important Let's start with "water" and "wood" Let's start with two simple characters Dutch education is different from Taiwanese education They spend a lot of time and energy making students understand origins of things from hands on learning For example, written characters are derived from writing For people who study design hand-copying characters is very good training It helps you understand what visual balance is Helps you understand what visual revision is We would even suggest graphic designers to learn about lettering Ever since the emergence of vinyl cutting Taiwan's streetscape has become very boring If you look at pictures of Taipei's street from the 70's You'll feel that signs were designed with great care Why was that? It's because they were all hand-painted This character is unknown to the Japanese My teacher, who's a calligrapher, once said he's worried about the prevalence of computer typing as people write by hand less and less You see, when we type in our characters and start to write less and less We might lose the familiarity we have with written characters If you want to write beautiful characters good handwriting is connected with weight, strength and muscles This looks like a QR code For me when I was learning how to read and write I thought to myself If I learn how to write it and I forget I'll still be able to read, right? But if I just learn how to read and I forget then I have nothing So I always wanted to write myself For non-natives they see how convenient it is to just type pronunciations and get this list of characters To them it's much easier, they don't want to mess with having to write they say I don't need to know that which I don't think that's true If you want to use Chinese as a tool to get a professional job, or to get a degree, even sell stuff in China it's always going to be better for you if you understand the writing system Language is most certainly tied into personal identity I had a very funny story about that myself I had a list of words For an English student of mine I was recording them, and the words were all supposed to rhyme So I start reading off these list of words I was like "set", "bet", "met", "get" Wait wait what? I never even thought about it but I don't say "get" I say "get" I'm from Texas, and I like saying "get" And I thought to myself: I don't care who does what to me, I ain't saying "get" I don't want to say "get", I like "get" But why would I have those reaction? Because it's a person identity issue right? I don't come from an area that says "get" so when I say get instead of get even though that's not that big of a difference For me personally I feel the distance, right? So for a Chinese speaker learning how to write Chinese characters or for an English speaker learning how to write English These type of attitudes probably also come into play I think fonts are a really interesting case of How a language is understood in a society Because if you think about a font it's really not giving you any new information You can use any font as long as you're able to read the word or read the characters It's not really telling you anything different than if you're using a great fonts or a really ugly font So it's kind of this question of why we care what the font looks like? So I think it's kind of a proxy for how much a society's thinking about The subtleties of design or the subtleties of expression There's a lot of fonts that aren't written I say a lot of font I don't mean the entire font there's definitely varying levels of how standard the character form are in a font A font has a strict definition It needs to contain at least 7,000 or even close to 20,000 words When we talk about typefaces in Chinese I don't think it directly correlates to the word "typeface" in English Because, in English the definition of "typeface" refers to the visual style of each specific font But in a Chinese, the generic term "typeface" includes anything that's written on paper, walls, or screens Nowadays when we talk about typeface we're mostly talking about their visual style But when we talk about fonts we are talking about a software product It contains a complete tens thousands of characters and punctuation marks That is the difference between them Native speakers tend to focus on They don't analysis inside of a character they kind of just see it as a whole There's a visual theory called the Gestalt Theory where you can see the shape of an object when you look at it It's the same for characters, which can be generalized as certain shapes For instance, oh look, this character This character is a standing rectangle which means it is elongated This is its shape Shapes are like people's body types: tall, short, fat or skinny If we look at someone today a person looks round, we would say he's chubby One of our stereotypical impressions of chubby people is that they're cute, or something else As for Weight Weight is like our eyes and nose There's a visual focus when we look at a person, we look at their eyes first It's the same principle for Counter when a character is compacted in the Counter, that's the look of traditional style characters This is normally how they are written A character with low Weight has a relatively wide Counter And a character with a high Weight has a more compact Counter My name is GuRong and I'm one of the type designers at Justfont When it comes to making font A Chinese character has two frames The outer square frame is called an Advance Width The inner frame that determines the different sizes of the font is called Reference Frames The basic concept is that the Reference Frames must be a little bit smaller than the Advance Width So when it comes to Letter-spacing It would already be determined by the Reference Frames A font needs to be designed And font designing is a very difficult job to do What does this industry need? It needs designers, engineers, managers people who understand design concepts people who put them all together It's a combination of technology and art It's an industrial art Designing Chinese has its degree of difficulty Compared with Roman characters It only takes one look to determine that The number of strokes of Chinese characters is significantly greater So when it comes to the design a lot of energy is required It requires a team of people In general, a set of Chinese fonts needs over one year to develop and complete Let's talk about the number of characters A Roman font consist of about 600 characters at the most But it's about 10,000 to 20,000 characters for a set of Chinese font It's a 20 to 40 times difference Okay, well, we used to pirate fonts all the time It felt as if fonts were generated by computers I didn't understand how much work goes into creating a font until I first started working at Arphic Technology This is Arphic's font creation process We collect all kinds of character faces from old books and journals where you can find different sizes of character faces and character cavities They come in long and wide types Then perform a script analysis This is our manuscript a manuscript we designed concerning stroke style design We then have discussions and perform trial production That's pretty much the font making process The steps of creating fonts is to decide on a frame first, which followed by the rest We also pay attention to adjusting the spatial layout When the prototypes are satisfactory we mass produce the fonts and perform quality control after completion of mass production The font on the top has a lot of variation A set of font data contains different variations of narrow characters and long characters There are also different weight customizations We also design the UI and content allowing the selection of different fonts My name is Sammy Or, I'm from Hong Kong I'm a font designer Being in Hong Kong, having a career as font designer back then it was practically unheard of I think I must have been the first font designer in Hong Kong There weren't people working in the field before me there wasn't really anybody to reference or learn from so the process was quite hard I have always said that us font designers we are craftsmen The foremost principle of font design The most important principle is one word "unification" It will be very appealing once your design is good It's the basic requirement for a set of fonts The LiSong font was perhaps one of the most important milestones in my life First of all, well, it's important for me because it was probably the first Outline Font, or what we called the PostScript Font it was the first PostScript font in Asia It was a great breakthrough in terms of experience and technology That's why it meant a lot to me Designing the LiSong font and utilizing the Fontographer software to design Chinese fonts are the two things that I'm most proud of to date because I used a very simple method Relatively speaking, from what I know, during that time to design an entire system of Chinese fonts It required at least tens of thousands or a million I'm talking about Hong Kong dollars here it takes at least millions to make an entire system But I was able to design it using a relatively cheap Apple Computer and a software which cost a few hundred US dollars that was that wasn't an easy feat which I think was the most meaningful for me When you're designing Chinese fonts you have to consider their coordination with English fonts On the other hand, let's look at this. The reason why I set this up is because apart from the kerning there's coordination with English to consider Chinese characters don't have a baseline setting The baseline for English letters is here which can't line up with the baseline for Chinese characters Otherwise it would look like the English letters are falling down Like this, the baseline is here The baseline for Chinese characters was originally here but I moved it higher Now they look more balanced, not uneven In the past especially Chinese font design only big companies were able to do it One of the main reasons was cost, you have to invest enough to pay two years' worth of costs I had friends who were interested in designing fonts But they didn't dare to jump in because the font design industry couldn't afford to keep designers Our initial goal in establishing Justfont was to design a Chinese... a Chinese Google webfont I believe a lot of us share this experience, which is you made a PowerPoint in which many fonts are used Then you hand it to your co-worker a message jumps out It says it can't find a certain font, so the font is replaced by a system font Yeah, we all have that experience So regardless of whether you are transmitting a website or document when it comes to fonts we all need them in order to view them Google fonts is a big one that distributes all these huge numbers of fonts And, they distributed through the web and what that means is that Each user of that font doesn't need to have installed on the computer so it's the same way that If you use Spotify you don't have to physically have those computers or those files on your computer in order to listen to music You can just pull it in from Spotify And so in the past the designers were limited to the fonts you already had installed on your computer Currently, webfont can only be used in Roman letters It's because Roman letters are relatively simple Uppercase and lowercase letters and symbols total between 200 and 300 characters The files are very small as well The webfont service provided by Google simply puts fonts on the web It's that easy But Chinese is very complicated If we put Chinese fonts on the web, there will be a huge disaster That's because there are about 13,000 Chinese characters on the web A Chinese font file is about 6-8 megabytes If, say we put four sets The computer won't be able to handle four sets of fonts on one page In the past font copyright authorization was similar to image copyright Designers were authorized so they can use them in their work for different companies But right now, especially in China it has changed to end user authorization meaning that end users are authorized to use them For about 10 years piracy was very rampant People didn't really have the concept of using legal software it was kind of oblivious for people As a result, even if font companies were willing to make font we put in a lot of investment, but couldn't recover the cost Not to mention that font design was very difficult So a lot of us ended up abandoning the market In addition, people can download them free of charge from the Internet Also the competition from open source fonts As a result, this market has never recovered We are now gradually shifting them to the cloud The business model will be unified Either you use it for business or personal use you can use them This way, it's more transparent people can make purchases for a single price The Japanese have a saying it's a Kanji phrase in Japan "To work with utmost effort" Meaning you have to do your best We can all appreciate this But when you read Japan's design history, you will notice that during the postwar era 50s to 60s, Japan also went through the so-called piracy era that Taiwan experienced They copied a lot of foreign products Japan went through this period as well It wasn't until later that the masters of the middle generation began to ponder the question What exactly is the Japanese culture? Can we combine traditional Japanese culture with contemporary design ideas? Japan is very interesting. Many of their TV programs are similar to Taiwan's "Word of the Day" Some of you may still remember it Even today there are still, let's say Japanese entertainment programs that invite a calligrapher to judge the handwriting of celebrities or entertainers or stars and make them write Each character is carefully graded There are many activities like this There's a famous activity called "Gozan no Okuribi" in Kyoto There are five or six mountains in Kyoto each have large characters on them, such as the word "big" and every year during summer vacations They light up the characters on the mountains in a ceremony Those big characters look very beautiful at night Japan has a lot of customs and festivals related to characters So people can keep a close relationship with their characters We have been working on building a new relationship with people via the Internet during the last few years We have organized workshops, promotions and organized many events Discussion has been very enthusiastic in the community but no one was willing to get involved in font design So we decided to start from ourselves At that time if Justfont didn't do it, no one would have done it After we were on board we started thinking.. What do we do now? Is there any way for us to solve the lack of funding? That's how the idea of crowdfunding came to mind Internet users are now talking about the upcoming birth of The first crowdfunded Taiwan-made font JinXuan is about to make its debut The design team initially planned to raise 50 thousand US dollars Yet it raised around 0.8 million US dollars within the first three days The team estimates it will take five years to complete design of the JinXuan font family According to the team, during the last 10 years There were fewer than five sets of Taiwan-made Chinese fonts on the market Due to the high cost of font design and rampant piracy the fonts we use today are generally made in Japan or Hong Kong The JinXuan font expresses Taiwan's unique typeface culture and conveys the elegance of Hanzi The way we attracted so much attention and were able raise such a high amount of money was unexpected I can only say that it's a lucky surprise The more attention this industry receives, the better for it Which means, for the general public, at the very least they will notice that fonts have copyrights and understand the issue of font development And further more it also let people understand that this industry has its own value and necessity This way people who are interested and talented will know that there's such a field such as font design they can put their talent to use in this field One of the things I really like about Chinese characters is they're aesthetically pleasing, just in and of themselves I mean they just look nice There's certain forms of Chinese calligraphy where Cursive script is very difficult to understand Because I've taken classes from a famous calligrapher here in Taiwan And I ask him, I'm curious, the guy who spent his whole life basically doing Cursive Can he just walk around and read any Cursive and he said Cursive isn't really made to be read it's made to be enjoyed You look at it and it gives you an impression and it's that impression People don't need to know how to design fonts but they need to know how to appreciate them Fonts are a link between design and culture What our society regards as beauty in life or cultural elements or values of design Is simply existing enough or do we want it to be aesthetically pleasing or do we want it to be unique My professor once said to me you're not a font designer but fonts are very important So you must remember as a graphic designer, when you are studying fonts you have to step back and look at the big picture You must learn to use fonts from a larger context We have lots of parents writing to us and contributing their ideas Because they're second generation Chinese And they face exactly the same challenge I have about how to communicate with our own children with our own language The language we're familiar with but they're not familiar with We're worried that one day they may lose their interest all together And other parents that are not Chinese upbringing they could be Spanish, Portuguese, and Hindi and they all share the same concern Because nowadays because of globalization the freedom of movement and migration we're all from somewhere before But to what extent we embrace the local culture? To what extent we bring the beauty of our ancestry into the new places we're settled? This is a much deeper and interesting question I always ask myself |
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