逆境中的好表现
Good type against all odds

原始链接: https://unsung.aresluna.org/good-type-against-all-odds/

某些显示屏上文字呈现出的“倾斜”外观,往往是逐行扫描更新带来的副作用,类似于相机的“果冻效应”(rolling shutter)。尽管这种倾斜的方向——以及我们对它的偏好——更多是源于习惯而非必要,但这凸显了有意识的设计选择的重要性。 无论这些效果是无意的伪影还是刻意的制约,它们都邀请我们去欣赏那些出现在意想不到之处的排版“工艺”。通过拥抱技术局限,设计师往往能创造出令人惊喜的创意方案。无论是受限于像素的体育场图标、巧妙的垂直连字,还是机器部件和键盘上极具针对性的排版,这些细节都证明了深思熟虑的工艺即便在最平凡的场景中也能大放异彩。归根结底,无论是得益于技术上的偶然契机,还是精益求精的努力,这些“令人愉悦的瞬间”都在提醒我们:关注微小的设计选择,能将标准的功能性转化为值得细细品味的事物。

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原文

This is not italics. This is not even oblique. This is a side effect of how those displays work. Instead of a whole rectangle of pixels being changed at once, the display is updated line by line, starting from the top one. As it’s moving towards the bottom, the internal horizontal position might have already advanced, the subsequent lines will be drawn slightly to the left, and it all leads to a slanted appearance. (This is in effect the same problem as rolling shutter in photography.)

The interesting thing is that it could’ve gone the other way. Twice. In English or German, we treat scrolling left to be natural, and we consider only one direction of italic slant appropriate. The first has to do with the direction of reading. I believe the second is, like many things in typography, customary; there’s nothing inherently better than right-leaning letters, except we’re used to them since those are the only ones we ever see.

But, the person putting it all together could’ve just as well done it the other way: scrolling to the right, or slanting to the left (by updating the display bottom to top – not as unusual as you might think!). Were those intentional choices, or was it a default? I’m not sure, but it points to the value of knowing this stuff, or creating a culture where this stuff is treasured. Often, more craft will require more work. Sometimes, however, you will get it for free – but only if you choose the right fork in the road.

While we’re here, how about a few other examples of delightful moments in typography where I did not expect them? These, I believe, will be all intentional. But whether you consider them craft, or even good, I don’t know.

Here are some surprising small caps:

Here’s a cute depiction of a train carriage, somewhat hampered by the limitations of a similar workhorse 5×7 pixel font display:

But here’s something even better. This icon of a stadium cleverly leaned into the same limitations. It’s so delightful. These are, I believe, four characters side by side:

Here, someone added nice decoration to fill out the space:

Here, someone removed all the line height to create a fascinating vertical ligature. This is Gorton and the letters are carved into the plastic, so this required some effort!

Speaking of obliques, this NOT is too thick, and slightly too large, but you have to appreciate someone actually slanting the text rather than underlining it, or decorating in a simpler way:

Even if you underline, you can go a little… well, below and beyond:

Or, here, with maybe the most impressive, three-dimensional underline I’ve ever seen:

This I spotted on an old typesetting machine, and I would like to believe this is an intentional easter egg:

This was on a computer keyboard. You don’t expect hyphenation in this context…

…and you definitely don’t expect an old-fashioned contraction:

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