Look mum, a Serif Fairy!

Fairy
The Serif Fairy meets a frog (who’s actually a P and a Q set in Shelley Andante Script)

The Serif Fairy is in a bit of a typographical predicament. It’s nothing to do with her kerning, her leading, or even her italicised “O” for a head – it’s, in fact, far worse. She’s gone and lost one of her wings and can no longer perform her magic…

A new picture book by René Siegried (translated by Joel Mann) follows the Serif Fairy’s quest to find her missing wing. And on the way, she encounters a wondrous array of landscapes, including…

Forest
the trees of Garamond Forest…

City1
…the modernist expanse of Futura City…

Trucks
…(where there are trucks and cranes…

Mopeds
…and some rather tasty mopeds)…

Lake
…and finally the delightful Lake Shelley

The charming tale employs just four typefaces to create all the pictures in the story: Garamond, Zentenar Fraktur, Futura Book and Shelley Andante Script. And it even shows you how most of the buildings, vehicles, trees and animals are constructed.

It also reminded us of the great limited edition set of postcards (called Typefaces You Won’t Recognise) that designer Paul Belford made for London’s Type Museum a few years ago. Remember these?

Type1
Type: Five Lines Pica No. 2; Anglo Saxon; Granby

Type2
Type: Figaro; Primer Two Line Ancient; Eight Lines Elongated Sans Series No. 3

Type3
Type: Eight Lines French Antique No. 1; Seven Lines Open No. 1; Doric No. 3

Type4
Type: Eight Lines Thorncliffe No. 2; Expanded Grotesque; No. 120 Sans Serif Old Style

Fantastic type faces.

Cover
Cover of The Serif Fairy

The Serif Fairy: Explorations in the World of Letters is published by Mark Batty and available at £9.99.

Comments...

This is a truly wonderful title. Beautifully illustrated; and if you’re a type-nut with young children, what better way to prime them than with this gem of a book. Probably my book of the year (thus far).

redsil
30/May/07, 10:33 pm

This is so sweet!. As a graphic design student wanting to go into book design i find myself fascinated by things like this. Your right though redsil for a type nut this is such a lovly book for your kid (although i may ivest in it myself!)

Kayleigh
18/Sep/07, 9:17 pm

Creating images from beautiful typefaces is certainly an art.

The following animation has 22 lovingly animated phobias; every single bit of it created using the font Perpetua.

http://www.freerangegregg.co.uk/Perpetuaphobia.htm

Hailey Winstone
14/Nov/07, 5:06 pm

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