"I hereby leave my eldest with the burden of figuring out how to keep selling my Totally Not Helvetica™ to the world if it hasn't figured out how to make font licenses understandable." Easy fix
"I hereby leave my eldest with the burden of figuring out how to keep selling my Totally Not Helvetica™ to the world if it hasn't figured out how to make font licenses understandable." Easy fix
… your insistence on the importance of me not having kids. In my view, this is an 'ad hominem' argument suggesting that my opinion is somehow less valid or important than someone else's because of who I am. …
just to clarify this:
• I have not been ‘insisting’ on anything.
• I have not made any ad hominem remarks about you personally.
• I have merely stated that “to have children or not is definitely not irrelevant for the point. […] If you raise a child, this certainly influences your view on certain things. ”
Furthermore, I have made no statement against taxation in general. But you have proposed to “tax the hell out of inheritance”, which expresses a the idea of deducting as much property as possible from as much people as possible. – This is not my idea of a civil society, sorry.
So really I think the question here is, how would the value of the copyrights to typefaces be assessed in probate?
Quite. And valuation of intellectual property for any purpose is always pretty vague. I had occasion to discuss this with a registered valuator a few months ago, and basically what tax authorities are looking for is a reasoned explanation of the valuation process, regardless of whether the resulting value is high or low. Whether a valuation is high or low tends to depend on the purpose of the valuation. So valuations for tax purposes, including probate, tend to be low; while valuations for e.g. sale of assets will tend to be as high as the seller can reasonably get them. Then, of course, there is the valuation that is reflected in the price that someone is willing to pay for something, which the market considers the more accurate valuation in the belief that the seller isn’t fraudulent and the buyer isn’t delusional.
A collection of good fonts is valuable part of our estate after we die, but ensuring its continued financial exploitation in the best interests of our beneficiaries is probably difficult. I know that The Type Founders are keen to do deals, but I'm curious if anyone has had thoughts or ideas for the inevitable event.
Miles!! my friend!!!! I think that besides your fonts, you should also WRITE a BOOK.
Not only in the best interest of your beneficiaries, but also in the best interest of graphic and font designers all over the world. A book about your design process (Its unique!!!!).
I think you are one of the greatest, and for the luck of us, you are still alive!!!
Consider this tradition: - Rand Holub: Signatures and Trademarks - Mortimer Leach: "Lettering for Adevertising" and "Letter Design" - Samuel Wello - Michael Harvey - Doyald Young Books
I think!!! you are next in the list... together with Ken Barber you can and you will rock it!!! We want to know how you come up with those great ideas!!
I dont know... I'm already took 4 whiscolas this afternoon! But I think you rock big time Miles!!!
Also: Good thing happen to your fonts after they become Libre, they get a live of their own. Consider it. It feels great!!!
@Eris Alar I suppose they could go there. But someone who hasn't been flattened by an elephant would have to place those fonts into the public domain, and I don't think they'd have the authority to do that.
Surely the executor, if instructed to do so in the will, has that authority.
I wish there was a digital locker where I could store public domain versions of my fonts. Every five years, I'd be required to log in to prevent them from being released. Then when I get crushed by an elephant (probably how I'll die) they'll get released into public domain without requiring the Disney mandated interval.
github allows you to assign a successor to your repos, including private ones. you'd just need to make sure your successor doesn't get flattened by an elephant at the same time as you. for public domain, BSD0 is the best license I'm aware of
I wish there was a digital locker where I could store public domain versions of my fonts. Every five years, I'd be required to log in to prevent them from being released. Then when I get crushed by an elephant (probably how I'll die) they'll get released into public domain without requiring the Disney mandated interval.
The non-digital version of this is just to add a line or two in your Will about your intention, possibly assign a specific executor who has the relevant domain knowledge to carry it out (I'll be happy to ) and possibly then a fund from the estate to claim expenses against.
Robots are good, but when they aren't available, hired labor works perfectly well.
I mean that apparently he also did revivals for Caslon 8 and Caslon 10, and a few more cuts in addition. In fact, I got his specimens (for 8 and 10) on this very site, some years ago. I think the Wayback machine had an archived version of his old website, where you could see that the ITC Founder's cuts were only about a third of what he had made.
@konrad ritter You’re right: the ITC release comprises four (12, 30, 42, 96pt) out of a total of fourteen optical sizes (8, 10, 12, 14, 18, 22, 24, 30, 36, 42, 48, 60, 72, and 96pt) produced by Justin Howes, plus the ornaments. The other fonts were once available from Howes’ own label, H W Caslon & Co. Ltd. I’ve amended our typeface bio at Fonts In Use with more detailed info and links.
Isn't that what happened to poor Justin Howes, and that's how his
beautiful Caslon revivals went lost forever? Such a tragic loss, in so
many ways.
A bit of investigating has turned up information on the missing fonts. They are not lost. The IP rights were bequeathed to St. Bride Library at Justin Howes' death. An email from the library this morning indicates they hope to commercialize the fonts within a year or so but first they have to be reworked to bring them up to modern font technology standards which would make them much easier to use. They have someone available who can help with that.
So there is hope we shall see them again, perhaps late this year.
Comments
Easy fix
Miles!! my friend!!!! I think that besides your fonts, you should also WRITE a BOOK.
Not only in the best interest of your beneficiaries, but also in the best interest of graphic and font designers all over the world. A book about your design process (Its unique!!!!).
I think you are one of the greatest, and for the luck of us, you are still alive!!!
Consider this tradition:
- Rand Holub: Signatures and Trademarks
- Mortimer Leach: "Lettering for Adevertising" and "Letter Design"
- Samuel Wello
- Michael Harvey
- Doyald Young Books
I think!!! you are next in the list... together with Ken Barber you can and you will rock it!!!
We want to know how you come up with those great ideas!!
I dont know... I'm already took 4 whiscolas this afternoon! But I think you rock big time Miles!!!
Also: Good thing happen to your fonts after they become Libre, they get a live of their own. Consider it. It feels great!!!
Love You!!! Cheers!!!
Write Your Book Miles!!!!!
Surely the executor, if instructed to do so in the will, has that authority.
Thank you.
We need to catch up, atypi?
Will connect offline
By the way... I forgot about Cecil Wade in the list
Robots are good, but when they aren't available, hired labor works perfectly well.