On Apr 28,
2016, at 10:37 AM, schoedel at
kw.igs.net wrote:
On Thu, 28 Apr 2016 13:19:43 +0100, Rod Smallwood wrote
But they built it out of circles and straight
lines and that's what I do.
That's superficially, but not exactly, true.
Even the 'o' is not a perfect
circle, and you can't get close to replicating the 's' or the digits that
way.
I took a stab at replicating the 'classic dec' font about a decade ago,
following
scanned DEC manuals wherever possible. I built up most of the basic ASCII set in
the outline form before suspending the project. (I suspect the solid form can
mostly be derived from paths through the middle of the outline strokes.) It did
get used a few years ago by our Jason T for some VCF Midwest graphics -
https://picasaweb.google.com/102190732096693814506/VCFMW50OfficialGraphics#…
2730455260610
Neat. I did the same many years ago, using CorelDraw as a very poor
man's font maker, but it was just good enough to create the basic outlines. I call
the font "Handbook" and I've sent out TTF files of it at times. I can do so
again if anyone wants it. It has no kerning in it (no support for that in CorelDraw). I
could probably add those with a better font editor.
The samples you pointed to don't take into account that there are two versions of f
and t and r -- one for end of word that has the long curl in your design, and one for
mid-word that has a shorter curl.
paul