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  • Animats 13 hours

    Somewhere, an LLM trained on this and can now produce cliche future fonts.

    Is the Trajan fad over yet?[1]

    [1] https://letterboxd.com/sethpaul/list/trajan-the-typeface-tha...

  • fredley 59 minutes

    Almost exactly the playbook I followed (unwittingly) when designing a logotype for my Playdate game recently:

    https://play.date/games/hyper-vector/

  • p0w3n3d 13 minutes

    In 2016 to make text look futuristic it would require using — (m dash) a lot, and maybe …

  • holotherapper 11 hours

    Futura Free

  • booleandilemma 10 hours

    My first thought was "that's just the star trek font".

  • 13 hours

  • QuercusMax 14 hours

    This should have a (2016)

  • bigethan 7 hours

    this is exactly the ESPN logo as well

  • sosomoxie 10 hours

    Ironically (I’m sure with intent). This looks super 80s.

  • mproud 10 hours

    Very tongue-in-cheek

  • socalgal2 6 hours

    Does the Back To The Future logo really count? Raiders of the Lost Ark as a very similar style but does not evoke "future". Yes, there are subtle differences. My point is, if you divorced them from the connection to their content I think it would be hard to point to one as "future" and the other as "not future"

    BoredPositron 2 hours

    The future always has context.

  • keyle 11 hours

        We want it to look like the text is stretching towards 2020
    
    Sigh, if only :|

    Who knew back then that we'd go from less design to no design at all produced by machines.

  • 8 hours

  • riffraff 13 hours

    Typeset in the future was awesome, too bad it stopped updating

  • xiaoyu2006 13 hours

    A genuinely fun post.

    ctippett 11 hours

    I agree! A refreshing interlude to the cybersecurity postmortems and corporate layoff news.

  • timebeforeland 13 hours

    Is this a joke..?

    dylan604 13 hours

    only if you don't get it

  • dhosek 8 hours

    At the 1996 ATypI meeting in Den Haag, one of the speakers coined the term “sterotypography” to refer to certain cliches that get used in type usage. Another case of this is the use of Neuland and Neuland Inline to represent Africa, and of course the assortment of faux Chinese fonts that were ubiquitous on Chinese takeout menus in the 80s and 90s (and probably still are, but are there still takeout menus in the era of Grubhub?).

    benj111 1 hours

    We use this sort of short hand all the time.

    There's "ye olde" in a gothic font.

    Walk into a super market, every product is giving you non textual clues as to what it is, and why it's different from the identical thing right next to it.

    You notice the odd ones out because you have to stop and work out what the thing is.

    Edit. An example is spreadable 'butter', in the UK and Europe you can't say it's butter, it doesn't say it's butter, but I bet most people have never noticed that because it's in butter type packaging with the design language you'd expect.

  • bhaak 10 hours

    Funny. I just googled this site 2 hours ago for a font inspiration for a makerspace logo.

    Michroma is a Google Font alternative for Eurostile.

    ErroneousBosh 1 hours

    Given the name you'd think it would be an alternative for Microgramma, but no, no - just look at the internal corners on letters like N, W, and V. In Microgramma they'd be flattened off but in Michroma and Eurostile they come to a point.

  • baigy 8 hours

    > the devastating Kern Wars of 2067

    Do we know who won those wars?

    marcosdumay 7 hours

    From the result there, looks like each faction got to keep some terrain.

    jamonserrano 5 hours

    Had the other side won, we would know them as the Kem Wars.

    mrexroad 1 hours

    Revenge is a typeface best served with Serifs

    Keeeeerrrrrrrrrrrnnn!!

    mikestorrent 7 hours

    To be honest I've had a lot of difficulty telling the two sides apart

  • efitz 5 hours

    I dunno, it’s kinda futuristic, but it’s missing the faux 3d effect where it appears to have warped up close to you and left a trail of light behind it, like the Star Trek example of the end. Nothing says “future” like fake 3d effects.

    mrexroad 1 hours

    FWIW, ST:TNG only used the faux 3D effect for the season that aired on the year of Star Trek’s 25th anniversary. Subsequent seasons reverted to the 2d text.

  • jonhohle 7 hours

    Missing The Terminator. Also applies to Wipeout, a game with some of my favorite logo and design work.

    doctorhandshake 2 hours

    The Designers Republic! https://www.thedesignersrepublic.com/

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Designers_Republic

    sgt 1 hours

    I like how the first like made the entire mobile browser go yellow, even the buttons. How did they do that?

  • giancarlostoro 14 hours

    Needs a (2016)

    > Posted on February 18, 2016 by Dave Addey

    Great read otherwise, I know the author mentions their book, I do wonder if he covers the history of how these fonts came to be so standard... for future stuff

    JK-Swizzle 13 hours

    As someone who has read the book, it does go through the history and inspiration of modern sci-fi typeset. Great coffee table book. Mainly expands on the articles on the website with more details and graphics.

    giancarlostoro 13 hours

    Might have to snag it, and like you say, keep it laying around as a coffee table book somewhere. :)

    bit_savager 10 hours

    "Somewhere"

  • genghisjahn 12 hours

    And then there is the papyrus font for avatar…

    genxy 4 hours

    I know what you did!

    jayd16 8 hours

    It's tribal, yet futuristic.

    Izkata 11 hours

    At least it wasn't Comic Papyrus...?

    arionmiles 1 hours

    He just... highlighted Avatar. He clicked the dropdown menu, and then he randomly selected Papyrus. Like a...Like a thoughtless child just wandering by a garden, just yanking leaves along the way.

    moron4hire 12 hours

    They can't keep getting away with it!

    RobotToaster 4 hours

    For those who don't get it https://youtu.be/jVhlJNJopOQ

    nntwozz 11 hours

    Avatar 6 and 7 planned (there's a joke there somewhere).

    Papyrus on the big screen 'til mid-to-late 2030s.

  • harimau777 12 hours

    I kind of wish they had used something other than Eurostyle for the starting font in their example since it is already a font that has become associated with sci-fi.

    Still a great article though! More of this please!

    jameshart 10 hours

    I think the author is aware: https://typesetinthefuture.com/2014/11/29/fontspots-eurostil...

    harimau777 9 hours

    Nice! Thanks!