The retro fashion cycle includes type.
- art nouveau was popular in the 1960's
- art deco returned in the 1970's
- 1950's type showed up in the new wave 1980's
- 1960's interpretations of art nouveau returned in the 1990's as well as a the 3rd Cooper Black wave and 1970's industrial as techno
- 1970's Avant Garde (still popular in the 80's) returned in the 2000's along with geometrics like Pump
- 2010's 8-bit look? Not sure if the retro cycle happened for type in the 2010's
- 2020's?
I know fashion doesn't adhere to precise decade boundaries but if you look at album covers and movie posters from the mid twentieth century on, it's pretty easy to see some kind of retro trend for type. But so far, this cycle has mainly dealt with pre-digital typefaces.
Will digital type designs will get pulled to the cycle? Have they already? The 8-bit look is certainly one case that's already happened. By digital type designs, I don't mean digital interpretations of pre-digital typefaces. Obviously they used digital Cooper Black and Avant Garde. I mean original digital type designs like Industria and Museo. I'm more interested in overall trends rather than individual cases.
Does anyone else ponder these things when they should be sleeping or is it just me?
Edit: just remembered a quirk about retro fashion. Things seem to have to fall out of use before they can make a comeback. When I was teenager in the late 1980's it was the paisley underground scene. The 60's polyester paisley shirts and peace sign belt buckles that littered thrift shops in the 70's were now hard to get and came with higher price tags. But most digital type never fell out of use so maybe that's the reason we haven't see a revival yet.
Comments
I would expect some smart alec irony first—a vogue for horizontally scaled distortion and faux bolding, Papyrus and Comic Sans shedding scorn.
When you look at the c.1990s faces that MoMA acquired, there doesn’t seem to be a stylistic commonality, as there was with those other movements you mentioned. Perhaps the deconstructed look of Fudoni and Caustic Biomorph would be more DTP-ish. That genre might also include the FF Dirty types, like the Trixie distressed typewriter font.
Or Licko’s pre-Filosfia reductive styles like Matrix and Base, as a quite different representative genre, that might also include Template.
Let’s not forget Neuropol and the rave scene!
I would imagine that the era will settle down in our collective memory and distill into one iconic “look”, but which?
What's the name of that blurry font that was everywhere in the 90's? It was mix of blurry and sharp, not FF Blur, the other one.
That did actually happen on an episode of Girls. They used my free font Stereolab and some other 90s rave looking fonts to spell Girls during the intro.
I've been looking back on a lot of the early-mid 90s aesthetic and it was a lot of fun. The world needs a little fun right now.
I noticed bring myspace back was trending on twitter yesterday. Do a google image search for myspace aesthetic, it's so wrong but so good.