CR Blog

Type for tattoos

Type / Typography

Posted by Gavin Lucas, 18 November 2010, 12:47    Permalink    Comments (3)

Argentinian type designer Alejandro Paul's latest face, Piel Script (piel, pronounced pee-yell, is the Spanish word for skin) has been specially developed for use by tattoo artists...

The typeface has a huge number of alternate characters (there are 41 different uppercase As to choose from) and plenty of ligatures and swashes to personalise your tattoo text designs.

“I have received a lot of requests to typeset and modify tattoos using other scripts I’ve designed like Burgues Script or Adios,” says Paul. “At first the whole idea was amusing to me. I had worked in corporate branding for a few years before becoming a type designer, and suddenly, I was being asked to get involved in personal branding, as literally ‘personal’ and ‘branding’ as the expression can get."

"In a way, Piel Script is a removed cousin of Burgues Script," Paul continues. "Although the initial sketches were infused with some 1930s showcard lettering ideas (particularly those of B. Boley, whose amazing work was shown in Sign of the Times magazine), most of the important decisions about letter shapes and connectivity were reached by observing whatever strengths and weaknesses can be seen in tattoos using Burgues. Tattoos using Adios also provided some minor input. In retrospect, I suppose Affair exercised some influence as well, albeit in a minor way. I guess what I'm trying to say is there is as much of me in Piel Script as there is in any of the other major scripts I designed, even though the driving vision for it is entirely different from anything else I have ever done."

More info on Piel Script can be found at veer.com – where it is available exclusively, for the sum of £60, as part of the Umbrella Type collection.

3 Comments

That's funny! It's lovely. I do a lot of tattoos, and people want 'my' own style, so every one has to be unique within the parameters of the work I do. But within that I find people asking for the same things. There's a pleasant, gentle irony in using a font to create the most unique thing you're ever going to commission. But tattoos are so commonplace now...it's almost an act of rebellion to have un-inked skin (which makes me and my totally blank canvas a 4-star anarchist).
Going to this has to be a better first step than browsing some of the cheesy, tired tattoo-books you see everywhere! It's done very well.
Sarah Coleman
2010-11-19 12:46:28


Helvetica for the skin? Much as I like the script, I'm not sure I'm on board with that idea.
Stuart Paciej
2010-11-20 14:11:07


I love it! Tattooing is so popular that more font development for it is sure to follow.

- eyeswoon (editor for the art and design blog: http://www.madeinslant.com)
eyeswoon
2010-12-13 09:09:05


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