- 01.28.12
Ambicase Fatface
Stephen Coles: Celebrating its inclusion on this list, Ambicase Fatface is now 30% off at MyFonts.… - 01.28.12
Chartwell
AndrĂ© Mora: I really like Chartwell and have used it for editorial design. I'm impressed by its ingenuity and excited by what it may insp… - 01.27.12
Sutturah
Marian Bantjes: I love this! My highest compliment: envy.… - 01.27.12
Neue Haas Grotesk
Erik Spiekermann: That, Matthew, is why Helvetica was so successful: nobody except a few Swiss & German designers would have ever dared order t… - 01.27.12
Apple Color Emoji
Christoph: You can find a complete overview of all the Apple Color Emoji characters here. (Works only with Safari. Hover to see Unicode … - 01.26.12
Changing
AndrĂ© Mora: I would love to read a 5,000 word review by Paul Shaw on this typeface. Though something tells me he'd only need 5.… - 01.26.12
Our Favorite Typefaces of 2011
Stephen Coles: Jason Santa Maria just posted a nice summary of highlights from the list.… - 01.26.12
Reina
Marian Bantjes: Whoa. Fantastic!… - 01.26.12
My Favorite Font Sources: A Shortlist of Trusted Foundries and Retailers
Josh Farmer: What about Underware and TypeTogether?…
Recently, I was contacted by one his collaborators, George Thomas. Upon learning that Phil had passed away, George felt it was time to set the record straight and give credit where credit is due. With the help of another Martin collaborator, Roc Mitchell, now in his eighties, he compiled the following list:
Designed by Roc Mitchell and licensed to Alphabet Innovations:
- Arthur
- Borealis
- Celebration
- Corporate
- Corporate Image
- Dimensia Light
- Dimensia Regular
- King Arthur Light with Guinevere Alternates
- King Arthur with Guinevere Alternates
- King Arthur Outline with Guinevere Alternates
- Stanza
Designed by George Thomas and licensed to Alphabet Innovations:
- Eightball
- Highball
- Cueball
Designed by George Brian, an employee of Alphabet Innovations:
- Souvenir Gothic (AI’s first text family)
- Opulent Light and Opulent Bold (Unconfirmed, but George is pretty sure that Brian did the art because he had a much steadier hand than Phil.)
The rest, to the best of his knowledge, are Phil’s ideas with George Brian doing the art on much of the later works and probably influencing Phil’s ideas.
This will be tough to send to arbitration, now that Phil’s not around.
I sense a new Lennon/McCartney debate in the making. ;)