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Type Directors Club
The Type Directors Club (TDC) is an international organization devoted to typography and type design, founded in 1946 in New York City. TDC believes that type drives culture, and that culture drives type—and is dedicated to cataloging, showcasing, and exhibiting typography worldwide. Founding member Milton Zudek described the club's goals at their first exhibit opening in 1947: Timeline 1943: The club was started as an unofficial gathering in 1943. Founding member Milton Zudeck described the club’s goals: “We simply want to make more and more advertising people aware of the important of the agency typographer. We want them to realize that the selection of type for an advertisement demands a sixth sense that goes beyond the basic knowledge of typefaces.” 1946: The Type Directors Club organization was formed by several leading NY art directors, including Aaron Burns, Louis Dorfsman and Milton Zudeck. 1960: The TDC was composed of men for many years until 1960 when ...
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New York City
New York, often called New York City or NYC, is the List of United States cities by population, most populous city in the United States. With a 2020 population of 8,804,190 distributed over , New York City is also the List of United States cities by population density, most densely populated major city in the United States, and is more than twice as populous as second-place Los Angeles. New York City lies at the southern tip of New York (state), New York State, and constitutes the geographical and demographic center of both the Northeast megalopolis and the New York metropolitan area, the largest metropolitan area in the world by urban area, urban landmass. With over 20.1 million people in its metropolitan statistical area and 23.5 million in its combined statistical area as of 2020, New York is one of the world's most populous Megacity, megacities, and over 58 million people live within of the city. New York City is a global city, global Culture of New ...
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Gerrit Noordzij
Gerrit Noordzij (2 April 1931 – 17 March 2022) was a Dutch typographer, typeface designer, and author. He started teaching letters and calligraphy at the Royal Academy of Art in The Hague in 1960. Motivated to make type accessible to his students, he identified the stroke of the pen as the central idea in the making of letter forms. What began as a method to make his students into better graphic designers grew, in various iterations and publications, into a comprehensive approach to type design. The contrast cube became an iconic model of his ideas. Noordzij recognised the possibilities of the computer in type design early on. He encouraged his students to not only study the pens and their shapes, but also adopt a critical view on making digital tools (and doing the math). By the time Noordzij retired in 1990, his methods were in use in type classes and workshops all over the world. His book ''The Stroke'' has been translated in (amongst others) English, German, French, Italian, ...
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The ATTIK
The ATTIK (latterly known as ATTIK) was a British creative agency founded in 1986 in Huddersfield, England by James Sommerville and Simon Needham. They are best known for their progressive and influential graphic design style, their series of "Noise" experimental design books, and their work for clients including, Coca-Cola, Sony PlayStation, MTV, Toyota, and Adidas. Overview ATTIK was founded by Sommerville and Needham in Sommerville's grandma's attic bedroom, with the help of a £2,000 grant from Prince Charles' The Prince's Trust. By 1990, the company employed eight people and had moved to a rented office space. Sommerville and Needham had also begun experimenting with the newly released Adobe Photoshop software on their 8 kHz Macintosh Plus. In 1992, future partner Will Travis joined the company. By early 1995, ATTIK had grown the Huddersfield team to 25 people, and later that year they opened an office in London, having secured work with Sony's PlayStation brand. Somme ...
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Carin Goldberg
Carin Goldberg (June 12, 1953 – January 19, 2023) was an American graphic designer, publication designer and brand consultant. She was known for her cover designs for record albums and books, with her work appearing in and on the covers of the '' New York Times Book Review'', the '' New York Times Magazine'', ''New York Magazine'', ''The Atlantic Monthly'', and ''Wired''. Her use of visual historical references generated controversy within the graphic design community. Early life and education Carin Goldberg was born in New York City on June 12, 1953, and grew up in Long Island and New Jersey. She graduated from the Cooper Union in 1975 with a BFA in painting. Career After graduating from Cooper Union and encouraged by the school's director of alumni relations, Marilyn Hoffner, Goldberg met with alumni Lou Dorfsman at CBS and worked up a series of logos for him. Dorfsman hired her as a junior designer where she began her career in the corporate design department of CBS ...
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Michael Vanderbyl
Michael Vanderbyl (born February 9, 1947) is a multidisciplinary designer and design educator based in the San Francisco Bay Area, and the principal of Vanderbyl Design. Biography Michael Vanderbyl was born February 9, 1947, in Oakland, California. Vanderbyl received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Graphic Design in 1968 from California College of the Arts (CCA). He taught graphic design at CCA for more than 30 years, from 1973 to 2014 and served as the Dean of Design from 1986 to 2002. Vanderbyl was one of the artists in the early 1980s that helped establish the San Francisco Bay Area as a center of the postmodern movement in graphic design. In the early 1980s a few San Francisco–based designers were nicknamed “The Michaels” because they all had the same name (Vanderbyl alongside, Cronan, Mabry, Manwaring, Schwab), and later they were known as the "Pacific Wave" according to historian Steven Heller. In 1973, he established his own practice, Vanderbyl Design. Ov ...
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Jessica Weber
Jessica Margot Weber (born March 18, 1949 in New York City) is an American art director, graphic designer, business owner, and adjunct professor of design. Weber studied concurrently at Parsons School of Design and New York University (Steinhardt School). She studied sculpture with Chaim Gross at the New School for Social Research. She is president and CEO of Jessica Weber Design, Inc., founded in 1986, which specializes in graphic design and marketing support for foundations and cultural, educational, and medical not-for-profit organizations. Weber's past work includes her time as Founding Art Director of the International Review of ''Food & Wine'' magazine. She redesigned the magazine when it was acquired by the American Express Publishing Company and renamed ''Food & Wine'' magazine. She was previously Executive Art Director of Book-of-the-Month Club, a division of AOL Time Warner, Inc. She directed the design of the company’s five monthly magazines, record covers, an ...
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Alan Peckolick
Alan Jay Peckolick (October 3, 1940 – August 3, 2017) was an American graphic designer, painter, and photographer. Peckolick was known for the typographic forms he created. His fascination for the graphic letter form underpinned much of his work as he drew much of his inspiration from historic signage and lettering. His projects included logo design and corporate identity for Revlon and New York University (typographic logo). He designed annual reports for AT&T, General Motors, Bell South and Pfizer. Internationally he worked for Society General (France), Grupo Industrial Alfa (Mexico), Mercedes-Benz (Germany) and Sony (Japan). Upon graduating from Pratt Institute in 1964, Peckolick went to work as an assistant to designer Herb Lubalin. In 1968 he opened his own design office. In 1972 he joined Lubalin, Smith & Carnase; several years later the company was reorganized and renamed Lubalin Peckolick Associates. Peckolick's work earned him over 500 design awards worl ...
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Akira Kobayashi (typographer)
Akira Kobayashi (小林 章, born 1960) is a Japanese font designer living in Germany. As type director for Monotype, he oversees typeface design and reprints of classic typefaces such as Optima. He has also served as a judge in several international typeface contests. He previously worked at (''Shaken''), and later designed the European characters for Hiragino Mincho and AXIS Font. He is a leading person in designing Western typefaces in Japan, and has co-developed fonts with Hermann Zapf and Adrian Frutiger. Kobayashi grew up in Japan and has written a Japanese-language book about Western fonts, titled "" ("Western font"). His work has been profiled in Communication Arts magazine, Print Magazine ''Print'' is an American design and culture website that began as ''Print, A Quarterly Journal of the Graphic Arts'', in 1940, and continued publishing a physical edition through the end of 2017 as ''Print''. As a printed publication, ''Print'' ... featured him in an interview, as ...
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Wim Crouwel
Willem Hendrik "Wim" Crouwel (; 21 November 1928 – 19 September 2019) was a Dutch people, Dutch graphic designer, Type design#Profession, type designer, and Typography, typographer. Early life and education Between 1947 and 1949, he studied Fine Arts at Academie Minerva in Groningen, the Netherlands. After graduating from a traditional art school, he served for two years in the military. Fresh out of the military, he was hired by an exhibition company in Amsterdam. During an interview in 2011, Crouwel said that his traditional art training hadn't taught him anything about typography, and that he eventually learned it by attending night classes in typography at what is now the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam. Career Crouwel began his career in 1955 creating exhibition, graphic, and product designs along with Kho Liang Ie. In 1963, he was one of the founders of the design studio Total Design (currently named Total Identity). From 1964 onwards, Crouwel was responsible f ...
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Fiona Ross (type Designer)
Fiona Ross (born 1954) is a British type designer, academic and linguist. Since 2003, she has worked at the University of Reading, where she is a Professor and Lecturer in Non-Latin Typeface Design. She has received awards such as the 2014 SoTA Typography Award and the 2018 TDC Medal. Ross was employed by Linotype's UK branch for designing fonts in non-Latin systems such as Bengali and Arabic. She received a PhD from SOAS, University of London in 1988, writing her thesis on the history of type design in the Bengali alphabet. She is a member of the Association Typographique International (ATypI The ATypI () or Association Typographique Internationale (the International Typography Association) is an international non-profit organisation dedicated to typography and type design. The primary activity of the association is an annual fall confe ...) and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. As of 2016, she had worked on type design in systems including: "Arabic, Hindi, Devanagari, ...
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Gerard Unger
Gerard Unger (22 January 1942 – 23 November 2018) was a Dutch graphic and type designer. He studied at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam from 1963–67, and subsequently worked at Total Design, Prad and Joh. Enschedé. In 1975, he established himself as an independent developer. A long-time guest lecturer at the University of Reading, he mentored many modern typeface designers. He lived and worked in Bussum, Netherlands. Work Unger developed many typefaces over the years, of which several specially developed for newspapers (usually typefaces with a large x-height and large inner counters), such as Swift, Gulliver, Coranto and Vesta. He also developed designs for magazines, coins, books, logos and stamps. A large number of Unger's typefaces are available from Linotype and the Dutch Type Library; his more recent faces are also available through the foundry Type Together. He released new work on his own website from 1995. Unger designed typefaces for the signage systems ...
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