

#FONTBOOK FOR IPAD WINDOWS#
#FONTBOOK FOR IPAD DOWNLOAD#
Sixteen fonts in all:įF Sero Medium is free to download and try. New from Photo-Lettering is a pull-no-punches slab serif. Satura by Peter Bruhn and Göran Söderström for Fountain Type. Weingut a frilly decorative display type by Georg Herold-Wildfeliner for Facetype. Lovely:Ĭrescendo by Nancy Harris Roemy and Patrick Griffin for Canada Type: Ralf Herrmann has uploaded a high-res (600 dpi) Walbaum Type Specimen. Not new, but just in case you missed it: Bacon Ipsum. If you’re wondering how it’s done: just use a projector! Love this iPad Letters Flickr set from Stephen Coles: Lots of inspiration to be found on Posters in Amsterdam: Twenty-one km! I don’t think there’s much chance of me replicating this feat: Similarly Joseph Tame does the new Google+ logo on foot (running!) in Tokyo. Urbanized Typeface : Shibuya08-09 from yang02 on Vimeo. How do you create a typeface with a bicycle? Here’s how: Some beautiful specimens of Jean François Porchez’s AW Conqueror on The Case & Point: Poem Script from Sudtipos Foundry on Vimeo. New from scriptmeister Ale Paul, Poem Script: Type Fluid Experiment “Z” from on Vimeo. Some very fat, very orange, vacuum-packed type from Spain-based Txaber: What would be great is the ability to print samples from within the app. It’s now available in an easy-to-search, easy-to-digest format - and it costs little more than a cup of coffee. The FontBook has always been a great reference book. I began writing a review, but there really is no need for one.
#FONTBOOK FOR IPAD CRACK#
The last FontBook was big enough to crack open your skull, but the new FontBook app will totally blow your mind. I like Mai-Linh Truong’s closing comment,

There’s also a good article over at the FontFeed about the team behind the iPad app. Refereence books are especially suited to digital and the FontBook is no exception. The iconic FontBook, that yellow, heavy-weight, doorstop, monster of a typeface reference is now available for the iPad. If you haven’t already downloaded it, then get on over to the iTunes store. The type-obsessive, thoroughly inspiring Andrew Byrom in this TEDxUCLA talk, If h is a chair:
