Majuscule Psi in both Greek and historical Cyrillic

Vasil Stanev
Posts: 784
Hello,
I am uncertain about the left arm of the Greek capital letter Psi. Should both arms be symmetrical or not? Checked variants in established fonts, left arm varies. Still uncertain.
Is there, or is there not a difference between the letterform of Psi, psi in Greek, and the historical one in Cyrllic? (me and my colegue are retrofitting historical fonts into a modern sans serif. That's how we decided it)
Psi:
Greek - 03A8, 03C8
h. Cyrillic - uni0470, uni0471
I am uncertain about the left arm of the Greek capital letter Psi. Should both arms be symmetrical or not? Checked variants in established fonts, left arm varies. Still uncertain.
Is there, or is there not a difference between the letterform of Psi, psi in Greek, and the historical one in Cyrllic? (me and my colegue are retrofitting historical fonts into a modern sans serif. That's how we decided it)
Psi:
Greek - 03A8, 03C8
h. Cyrillic - uni0470, uni0471
0
Comments
-
Should both arms be symmetrical or not?
in principle: yes. individually: not neccessarily.
Counts for both Greek and Cyrillic.
0 -
Whether the arms of the Psi are symmetrical is a stylistic question, and is related to stroke modulation patterns. In Romantic (Didone) style types, the tendency is for the right arm to be a hairlines terminated by a ball or lacrymal terminal, while in Renaissance (Garalde) types the arms are more likely to be symmetrical. Of course, within these categories exceptions may be found.0
-
I went with the asymmetrical approach based on the Romantic stroke modulation in my Brill types.
But not all Romantic models follow this pattern. Bodoni favoured symmetrical Psi, although his Greeks are frankly pretty awful. The Didot Greeks are much better and certainly more influential.
0 -
With regard to the relationship between the Greek and Cyrillic Psi, if you go far enough back in time you'll find Byzantine Greek and early Cyrillic manuscripts in which they are indistinguishable (indeed, I've seen Cyrillic manuscripts that I think most people would assume to be Greek if they didn't know the language). But historically the scripts diverged, so the traditions present opportunities both to harmonise the forms and to differ them. In the Brill types, I opted to make them different, and to reference the Cyrillic forms with straighter arms and a flat connection at the base of the arms.1
-
0
Categories
- All Categories
- 44 Introductions
- 3.8K Typeface Design
- 474 Type Design Critiques
- 554 Type Design Software
- 1.1K Type Design Technique & Theory
- 637 Type Business
- 827 Font Technology
- 29 Punchcutting
- 505 Typography
- 120 Type Education
- 312 Type History
- 73 Type Resources
- 109 Lettering and Calligraphy
- 30 Lettering Critiques
- 79 Lettering Technique & Theory
- 527 Announcements
- 84 Events
- 110 Job Postings
- 163 Type Releases
- 169 Miscellaneous News
- 273 About TypeDrawers
- 54 TypeDrawers Announcements
- 117 Suggestions and Bug Reports