Eau de Garamond — a sans distilled from the essence of Garamond

11012141516

Comments

  • Christian ThalmannChristian Thalmann Posts: 1,938
    edited February 2019
    I'm considering switching from the present form of diagonal accents (left) to one with horizontal cuts (right). While this is less in keeping with the typeface's stroke principles, it does give the accent more stability and less leaf-in-the-wind-ness. This is particularly apparent in the Black, where in the original the stroke with starts to compete with the stroke length.
    I chose the horizontal cuts for another typeface (Quinoa) and was very happy with the change. I find the situation less clear here, since the horizontally cut accents give up some humanism for the sake of convenience...
    One big advantage of the horizontal cut is that it makes /hungarumlaut more manageable.

  • I think I prefer the cheerfulness of the original, but it does get a bit crowded. Have you tried something in between? Or the new bottom together with the old top?
  • To my eye, the newer accents look a bit steep—at least for languages that have both acute and grave accents, such as French. The acute and grave accents might start to get too similar, especially in the bolder weights? Of course, you being Swiss are familiar with this issue.

    Languages with only acute (and double acute) accents, such as Polish and Hungarian, can go that steep no problem.
  • Kent LewKent Lew Posts: 905
    I disagree with Thomas about the “too steepness” of the newer accents. I think they look very French, very Garamond, FWIW. I like them. I don’t think there’d be confusion between acute & grave. (But, then again, my native tongue does not regularly employ these accents, so what do I know?)
  • Christian ThalmannChristian Thalmann Posts: 1,938
    edited February 2019
    I have the strange impression that the new accents are actually more legible... the old Black acute is not too far away from a directionsless diamond, whereas the skewed asymmetry of the new design defines an unambiguous direction.

    I don't think French suffers from grave <> acute ambiguity, BTW. The accent type can almost always be predicted from context. I'm sure there are languages where they mark a phonemic contrast, though. Pinyin comes to mind.
  • Christian ThalmannChristian Thalmann Posts: 1,938
    edited February 2019
    The difference is even more pronounced with several accents. The horizontal cuts make them line up nicely, whereas they danced about before.

  • I still prefer the top ones. I think a little 'dancing about' is appropriate for a Garamondish typeface.

    Bottom ones might be easier to read though, and certainly easier to hint.
  • I love the development of this font and how it is different from ITC Legacy Sans. I like the spirit it has, very humanist, but with a lot of original character. The upper handle part of the lowercase “a” doesn’t feel there yet for me. It’s very subtle, but the contrast in the black (or bold) version makes it stand out more.
  • Have you printed the different version in 10pt?
  • Hmm, the more I look at this, the more the dancy accents irk me. I'm pretty sure I'm going to switch to the new accents for the default; not sure yet whether I should preserve the dancy accents as a stylistic set. Seems like a lot of work, and I doubt anyone would end up using it.
    I looked at some other Garamonds on MyFonts. Most of them have this type of accent:
    I.e., a chimera of organic top and horizontally cut bottom. I don't like it. The Garamond I probably respect most looks like this instead:
    Which is surprisingly close to my new accent style! :blush: And EB Garamond is pretty close to that as well:


    Jasper: Since I'm going for a reading typeface (hopefully even a book typeface), I'll take good readability and hinting over a bit of Garamond-specific quirkiness any day... :grimace: 
    Henning: What is it about the top of /a/ that you don't like?
    Georg: Good idea!
  • edited February 2019
    The top of the letter “a” in bold (or black) seems undecided. It’s neither open (as in Okay Type’s Alright, the font of this forum, nor closed, as it is more typical for transitional typefaces.
    I know extracting a sans serif out of a Geralde is not a mundane task. (I’m aware of the dispute of classification in regards to the several variations of Garamond fonts.)
    I have been looking at angles of letter endings/beginnings, such as “a”, “e”, “s”, “c” in humanistic, grotesque and geometric typefaces. It appears that geometric fonts to often use stroke ending angles that sit around a 45º angle (Avenir), but there are exceptions, like the C and c of Futura.
    On the other hand, grotesque fonts tend to want to close in a horizontal line, so the “a”, “s”, “e”, “c” all close up more or less close to a horizontal ending.
    A few newer fonts, such as Roboto or Shinn Type’s Neology have broken with this paradigm.
    I have no solution and it is just a feeling. But I think the ball closure in the lowercase “a” of Garamonds is hard to “hit right” with the sharp corners of the ending strokes of a sans serif.
    Maybe something like Syntax did? I honestly don’t know without testing.
  • OMG, Kindle now allows custom fonts! I've just uploaded Ysabeau, and I already love it. Looking forward to some longer reading sessions in it. :grimace:
  • The italic also works nicely:


  • AbrahamLeeAbrahamLee Posts: 262
    That’s a pretty wild /ff ligature you’ve got going in the italic.
  • Christian ThalmannChristian Thalmann Posts: 1,938
    edited April 2019
    BTW, I've finally deleted the old «EauTest Text» instances from the repo. The Text cut originally provided more legible versions of /a/ and /e/, but that's no longer necessary with the default /a/ and /e/ these days. I've repurposed those instances for a new «Ysabeau Office» cut with horizontal hyphen-minuses instead of the slanted hyphens, no long-tailed /Q/, and tabular lining figures.
    Oh, and the repo is now called «Ysabeau» even in the URL. Might have to change bookmarks, but I think you'd be forwarded from the old address.
  • That’s a pretty wild /ff ligature you’ve got going in the italic.
    Too wild for reading? It's taken straight from Garamond.
  • AbrahamLeeAbrahamLee Posts: 262
    Not at all. That wasn’t meant to be a negative criticism. It’s just a noticeable design when many text faces are designed to disappear. That’s all.
  • I guess the Italic comes with a higher level of «markedness» to begin with and can get away with a bit more attitude than the Roman.
  • Christian ThalmannChristian Thalmann Posts: 1,938
    edited May 2019
    Eszett demo image for hotlinking to another discussion; don't mind me. :wink: 
  • I've hated that very narrow /f.short/ for a long while now... see the second /f/ in the image. I finally made a wider /f.short/ that better matches the default /f/, see all following examples.

    Still debating with myself whether I want to use /f.short/ instead of morpheme-crossing ligatures like /f_b/ or /f_f_h/. Maybe I should also give the ligatures an overhaul to be fair... currently I'm a bit annoyed at how flat-topped they become in the Light, in contrast with the round-topped default /f/.

  • Christian ThalmannChristian Thalmann Posts: 1,938
    edited May 2019
    Here's what it looks like with reduced ligatures (only /f_f/, /f_i/, /f_f_i/, /f_t/, and /f_f_t/):
    Works pretty well, but I'm feeling bad about removing ligatures from a Garamond.  :grimace:
  • Craig EliasonCraig Eliason Posts: 1,397
    I like the connecting crossbars. The /f.short is an improved shape, but feels like it's pushing off the ascending letters that follow it. Could its RSB be shrunk a bit more, without necessitating a connection at the top? (You don't have a baseline serif to help fill up the white space like Garamond did.)

    The difference in height between the consecutive /f/s is too great to my eye (but I know you'll show me Garamond's as a rejoinder :smile: ). They also feel too close perhaps (though raising the hood of the first /f/ would increase the area of that top counter and ease the crowding a bit). 
  • Yes, I overshot the mark a bit with widening /f.short/. This works better, I believe?

  • Test-reading this version, I find that my eye snags on that tiny gap between /f.short/ and /l/. My main beef with the original ligatures was not that were fused, but that they joined too far up, placing the apex on the /l/ rather than between the letters. I’ll try a more organic ligature next. It will probably necessitate a bracket trick. 
  • Aha! Allowing the second component to be lower than ascender height allows a natural shape for the /f/ component...  looking forward to testing this one on the Kindle.

  • Jacob CasalJacob Casal Posts: 99
    Perhaps a dumb question on my part, but I imagine you would hold onto your /f.short for something like a /ı/i distinction though, no? Or is the full to reduced ligatures two separate styles?
  • Definitely. The /f.short/ is employed by CALT even if you switch off LIGA. Both modes should yield an agreeable result.
  • I'm done with the upright Black Cyrillic and just finished a first draft of the Greek. Not completely sure about some of these, especially in the caps... opinions?

  • Adam TwardochAdam Twardoch Posts: 507
    edited January 2020

    My Warsaw colleague Mateusz Machalski has just released his font family »Gaultier«. The family is a bit similar in concept to Ysabeau, though Mateusz cites both Garamond and Gill (and Granjon of course) as his sources. 

    Mateusz initially had another name in mind (»Neuropa«). I thought it was pretentious, and I talked him into changing it. I came up with the name Gaultier because I remembered the development of Ysabeau 🙂 I then wrote it up in an attempted amusing Polish Facebook post. 

    I hope you won’t mind if I republish my translation here:


    »Claude Garamond was married twice.

    Four years ago, the talented Swiss type designer Christian Thalmann started drawing a sanserif family based on the skeleton of Claude Garamond’s eponymous typeface. He first called it »Eau de Garamond«, but changed the name shortly before release. He named the font family »Ysebeau«, because the second wife of Claude Garamond was Ysabeau Le Fevre.

    Four years ago, the talented Polish type designer Mateusz Machalski started drawing a sanserif family based, partly, on the skeleton of Claude Garamond’s eponymous typeface. He first called it »Neuropa«, but changed the name shortly before release. He named the font family »Gaultier«, because the first wife of Claude Garamond was Guillemette Gaultier.

    I assume that somewhere around the world, four years ago, another talented type designer began the project of drawing a sanserif family based, to some extent, on the skeleton of Garamond’s eponymous typeface.  First, he gave it some working name, but shortly before publication, he wanted to change it.  But now he is pissed off because Claude Garamond had no more wives.«


  • Hehe... Gaultier is a bit problematic, though, since Gauthier is already an established Garalde:
    https://www.myfonts.com/fonts/black-foundry/gauthier-fy/
    Maybe it should have been Guillemette, then...?
Sign In or Register to comment.