The brief for the Opel project was to take test characters
designed by Gary Scriven and his team at Interbrand Newell & Sorrell, and
to convert them into font format. A full typeface in the sans serif, geometric
style was then to be developed, picking up design cues from the supplied test
characters.
The converted data was then split into individual characters and each placed in
its appropriate position within a new font. The next step was to check the
technical quality of each character outline. Any superfluous on-curve points
were removed (ensuring the basic letter shapes did not change), double points
removed and shapes assessed for minor errors.
A PostScript® font was then made so that a first proof could be run to see how
the test letters performed over a range of different sizes. This showed that a
careful assessment of stroke weights needed to be made (cap ‘G’ looked thin to
other caps) and that the lowercase ascenders (‘f’) looked very tall compared to
the caps.
Work was then carried out on the test characters to make weights more even; the
lowercase was scaled down a little to bring the top of ‘f’ closer to the top of
capitals. Checks were also made on the height relationship of round letters
(such as ‘O’) to square letters (‘Z’).
The next phase was to design some more characters. It was important to establish
the basic shapes and proportions of the typeface; a range of characters was
agreed which would allow the most important design criteria to be fixed. Some
alternative designs were tried, for instance ‘e’ and ‘i’. We were also able, at
this stage, to start to look at the basic letter spacing for the typeface.
Capitals ‘H’ and ‘O’ and lowercase ‘n’ and ‘o’ are set up as control characters
for the alphabets.
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