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13–15 December 2018: DiaTipo São Paulo 2018

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Glyphs ace Joana Correia will deliver an introductory type design workshop at this year’s DiaTipo in São Paulo. Speak Portuguese? Do not miss this.

Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Workshop: Primeiros passos no Type Design

  • When?

    Quinta, 13 de dez — das 9h às 17h

  • Who?

    Joana Correia (Nova Type Foundry)

  • Where?

    Senac Scipião
    Rua Scipião, 67

  • How much?

    R$ 440

  • For whom?

    Designers interested in type design. No prior experience in type design necessary.

  • Prerequisites
    • Sketch Book
    • Lápis e borracha
    • Marcador preto
  • Links

    http://2018.diatiposp.com

Dê os seus primeiros passos em Type Design desenhando formas simples, que serão a base para desenhar uma fonte. Transforme suas ideias em letras e em um alfabeto. Você irá aprender a transpor os desenhos feitos à mão para o digital e, desta forma, ver a sua fonte ganhar vida na tela. Será uma introdução ao desenho de tipografias digitais utilizando o Glyphs App.


DTL OTMaster 7.9 Available

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Our Tools section has received a very special update. We are proud to announce the first third-party tool in our web store: DTL OTMaster 7.9.

Inspect, test and edit your compiled OTFs and TTFs with Dutch Type Library’s OTMaster, known by it users as ‘OTM’. It has been a corner stone in the font production process of many foundries all around the world. OTM’s unparalleled tools make it the Swiss army knife for font production. Read more about OTMaster.

DTL OTMaster 7.9 – now available through glyphsapp.com.

10 June 2019: Syndicom Variable Font Workshop in Olten

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Join Glyphs member Rainer Scheichelbauer in a 1-day Syndicom workshop and create your first variable font! Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Workshop: Make Your First Variable Font [de]

  • When?

    Montag, 10. Juni 2019
    9:00–16.45 Uhr

  • Who?

    Rainer Erich Scheichelbauer

  • Where?

    Bahnhof Buffet Olten
    Olten, Schweiz

  • How much?

    Kategorie 1: CHF: 0.–
    Kategorie 2: CHF 140.–
    Kategorie 3: CHF 640.–
    (Kategorie 1: syndicom- und Syna-Mitglieder aus VISCOM vertragstreuen Betrieben. Kategorie 2: Alle anderen syndicom Mitglieder. Kategorie 3: Nichtmitglieder.)

  • For whom?

    Schriftgestalter, Grafiker, UX- und Webdesigner, die sich für Schrift interessieren. Verfügbare Plätze: 20.

  • Prerequisites

    Eigenes MacBook mit Glyphs und einem aktuellen Web-Browser. Erfahrung mit Vektografik nützlich, aber nicht nötig.

  • Links

    Info bei Syndicom

Variable Fonts sind die Zukunft der Schrifttechnologie. Lerne, wie du mit dem intuitiven Font-Editor „Glyphs“ einen neuen Font anlegst und ihn mit einfachen Mitteln sogar animierst. Am Ende des Tages nimmst du einen Font mit einem variablen Emoji und einen Font mit einigen bewegten Buchstaben mit nachhause. Im Zuge des Workshops testest du deinen variablen Font in Web-Browsern und (je nach Verfügbarkeit) in den neuesten Adobe-Apps.

11 June 2019: Syndicom Variable Font Workshop in Fribourg

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Join Glyphs member Rainer Scheichelbauer in a 1-day Syndicom workshop and create your first variable font! Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Workshop: Make Your First Variable Font [fr]

  • When?

    Mardi 11 juin 2019
    9:00–16:45 h

  • Who?

    Rainer Erich Scheichelbauer

  • Where?

    NH Hotel Fribourg
    Fribourg, Suisse

  • How much?

    Catégorie 1: CHF 0.–
    Catégorie 2: CHF 140.–
    Catégorie 3: CHF 640.–
    (Catégorie 1: membres syndicom et Syna des entreprises affiliées à Viscom. Catégorie 2: Tous les autres membres syndicom. Catégorie 3: Non-membres.)

  • For whom?

    Concepteurs de polices, concepteurs graphiques, UX et concepteurs Web qui s'intéressent aux polices de caractères. Places disponibles: 20.

  • Prerequisites

    MacBook avec Glyphs 2 installé.

  • Links

    Informations chez Syndicom

Les polices variables sont l'avenir de la technologie typographique. Apprenez à utiliser le logiciel intuitif «Glyphs» pour créer votre propre police et même l'animer avec des moyens simples qui vous introduiront à la technologie variable. À la fin de la journée, vous aurez deux polices, une première avec un emoji variable et une autre avec des lettres animées. Au cours de l'atelier, vous testerez votre police variable dans les navigateurs web et dans les dernières applications Adobe.

13 December 2018: Glyphs at Typostammtisch Zürich

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Typostammtisch Zürich: «Für den letzten Typostammtisch dieses Jahres erwarten wir Besuch aus Österreich!»

24. Typostammtisch Zürich

  • When?

    Donnerstag, 13. Dezember 2018
    ab 19:00 Uhr

  • Who?

    Rainer Scheichelbauer

  • Where?

    Atelier von Roland Dill
    Flüelastrasse 10, Zürich

  • How much?

    Free.

  • For whom?
  • Prerequisites
  • Links

    typozueri.ch

Rainer Erich Scheichelbauer hat Fotografie, Philosophie und Niederländisch studiert und dann festgestellt, dass seine wahre Leidenschaft im Typedesign, Unterrichten und Coden liegt. Seit 2012 arbeitet er am Schrifteditor «Glyphs» mit, für den er auch Tutorials verfasst und Workshops gibt – so auch Mitte Dezember in Zürich. Wir freuen uns sehr, dass Rainer vorher noch beim Typostammtisch vorbeischaut und über experimentelle OpenType-Features berichten wird.

New Features in Glyphs 2.6

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Welcome to Glyphs 2.6, which first and foremost is a free maintenance update for macOS 10.14 Mojave. And as part of that, we are thrilled to present to you Glyphs—in Dark Mode:

Antonia by Typejockeys

Isn’t it a beauty?

But I suppose you know us already well enough that you can guess we did a little more than just that. We added many, many improvements, fixes, enhancements, accelerations and whatnot. Read on for a little overview of what’s new in the latest version of Glyphs.

Speed, Speed, Speed

Oh boy, have we put the pedal to the metal… We were able to restructure the way both Edit and Font views are drawn on the screen. Now, screen drawing makes full use of the latest and greatest graphics capabilities in macOS, so you should see a significant performance increase when scrolling through the Font tab, or with a lot of text in an Edit tab. The same is true for a number of batch edits. And if your machine has a lot of processor cores, well, put on your seat belt and see for yourself.

Selecting Segments

Small addition, big change in your workflow: You can now select outline segments. Click, boom, it’s that easy. No modifier keys, no nothing, just click on it:

And of course, you can Shift-click to add or remove segments from your selection.

Variable Fonts

We debuted it at ATypI Antwerp earlier this year: you can now make color variable fonts with Glyphs! Even Brace layers are supported, haha. Believe it or not, this is (an animated GIF of) a font:

What do you have to do to achieve it?

  1. In Font Info > Masters, set up the color palette like you would for a CPAL/COLR font.
  2. Create ‘normal’ black and white variable glyphs, with brace layers and everything you need for the various parts you want to move (in the Pong example, the background, ball and bats)
  3. In a new glyph, insert them as components, but on different Color layers.
  4. Drag the Color layers in the right order, and you’re done. Ta-daa!

We renamed the custom parameter Variation Font Origin to the more consistent Variable Font Origin. The old name should still work, but please update your files accordingly anyway. Plus, we added two new parameters:

  • Variable Font File Name (or the equivalent variableFileName) lets you set the file name of the exported font.
  • variableStyleName sets the default style name of your variable font. This makes most sense if you do not have any instances set. If you do not set anything, it will default to ‘Regular’.

What else happened in Variable Font Land? We added mkmk mark-to-mark attachment GPOS variation, improved kerning in variable fonts containing three or more axes, and improved GPOS export with extension lookups. And while we were at it. we significantly improved the variation of anchors from components. Many thanks to Filip Blažek for pointing that one out to us.

Reusing Shapes

From now on, when you create _corner glyphs for use as corner components, they will default to a narrower advance width of 200, rather than the usual 600. This makes more sense for the partial outlines that corner components are, and it will keep your Edit view from cluttering up in case you find yourself working with a bunch of them.

You can make variants of your base letters with suffixes like .topAccent or .bottomAccent, then this letter will be preferred for generating compounds with marks that make use of the indicated anchor. I know, sounds complicated, so here is an example. Say you have a lowercase g with a funky ear. Very nice, but it may get in the way of top accents in compound glyphs like gcommaaccent, gcaron or gdotaccent. So you can duplicate your g, name it g.topAccent and flatten its ear, perhaps like this:

The next time you create a g compound that has a top-connecting mark, say gcircumflex, the .topAccent variant will be preferred for the base:

You can also combine multiple anchors in one such suffix. Make sure they are (a) camel-cased and (b) in alphabetical order, .e.g., .bottomTopAccent, .bottomOgonekAccent or hornToprightAccent.

One more thing about components: When you save a file with Cmd-S, Glyphs will update the component positions for all auto-aligned compound glyphs.

Masters and Interpolation

I have four pieces of news for you. Admittedly, they are all a little geeky, but if you work with multiple masters, you will love them:

  1. If you merge fonts via Font Info > Masters > Plus menu > Add Font as Master, all secondary (non-interpolating, non-master) layers are preserved now.
  2. You can now use the Layers palette’s Re-interpolate function on multiple selected glyphs at once. It will then reinterpolate the layers of the currently selected master.
  3. The Layers palette now has an option called Re-interpolate Metrics, and it does what it says. It leaves paths, anchors and components alone, but updates LSB and RSB in the selected layer(s).
  4. You can now add more than one master at once in Font Info > Masters > Plus menu > Add Other Font.

By the way, have you been using the mekkablue script Masters > Insert Instances? Update it, please, it has recently gotten a lot better: It can now populate the style name fields with natural names and set weight classes and style linking too.

Color Fonts

We improved sbix support: You now have better control over image positioning, you can better import sbix fonts into Glyphs, and export has been optimised as well. Oh, and the sbix picture is previewed in the proper relative size, no matter whether you are editing an iColor layer or whether you are in text mode:

iColor glyphs are now also better supported in Font View:

Too much to swallow at once? No problem, we have updated the sbix tutorial for your laid-back reading pleasure.

  • We also improved SVG color font support, no matter which method you use.
  • Color layers are now included in View > Show Master Compatibility. (And yeah, you guessed it, they’re interpolated as well.)
  • Glyphs tries to stay on an equivalent Color layer when switching between glyphs with Home/End (or fn-left/right) keys. Provided, of course, that both glyphs have the same or similar Color layer structure. That makes it much easier to edit the same color when stepping through the glyphs.
  • Import and export of alpha values for colors has been improved.
  • More intelligible error reporting when loading SVGs.

TrueType

We have some pretty cool TrueType improvements in store for you. For one thing, View > Show Master Compatibility now works like a charm with quadratic curves.

A custom parameter called TTZoneRoundingThreshold, which you can set in Font Info > Font or Font Info > Instance (the latter takes precedence, of course), controls the likelihood of a zone being pushed up a pixel. It takes a small decimal number as value, typically something around 0.1 or 0.2. The value is added to any positive zone position before rounding, and added twice to the x-height zone (the one named xHeight in the TrueType zones). If you do not set it, a default of 0.09375 is assumed.

Example: At a certain font size, the smallcap zone ends up at 6.45 pixels, and the x-height at 5.25 pixels. Without any change, the smallcap zone would round and snap to a height of 6 pixels, while the x-height would end up with 5 pixels. But you set a TTZoneRoundingThreshold of 0.2, so the smallcap height ends up at (6.45+0.2=6.65≈) 7 pixels, and the x-height at (5.25+2×0.2=5.65≈) 6 pixels.

You can trigger conversion between quadratic and cubic outlines now also in Font view. Just select a number of glyphs, or all of them, and run Paths > Other > Convert to Cubic, or Quadratic, respectively. Now you can batch-convert your heart out, have fun. Speaking of which, TT conversion has been improved further, and among other things, inflection points are now added automatically to your TrueType outline.

Many little things were improved in the TrueType Instructor tool (shortcut I). A big round of applause to Noe Blanco who shared her invaluable input with us. More improvements are in the pipeline.

And there is a new hidden setting called TTPreviewAlsoShowOffCurveIndexes that switches on display of all point index numbers. Simply run Glyphs.defaults["TTPreviewAlsoShowOffCurveIndexes"]=True in Window > Macro Panel and switch to the TT Instructor tool (I):

This can be handy, e.g., if you need the point indexes for writing TTF Autohint Control Instructions. Speaking of Werner Lemberg’s TTF Autohint, we fixed a few issues and integrated its latest version into the app. In other words, --stem-width-mode is now supported, and strong stems work better now.

Back to Glyphs’ own TT instructioning. You can now add a TTMinimumDistance custom parameter to your instance in File > Font Info > Instances. The default is 0.25, which means that any hinted stem will be drawn with a minimum length of a quarter pixel, no matter which PPM size, if it has a stem hint applied to it. If you are not happy with the default of 0.25 pixels, you can set your own minimum distance (in pixels) with this parameter. This value kicks in at small pixel sizes, where small parts are in danger of disappearing.

Also, TrueType instructions now use a hardcoded control value cut-in, which basically means that hinting is deactivated in bigger sizes. More precisely, it will prevent outline distortions if the effective change results in something bigger than (97÷64=) 1.515625 screen pixels.

You can automatically add TT Instructor hints from within the Font tab. To do so, switch to Edit view and choose the TrueType Instructor tool (I), then switch back to Font view (Cmd-Opt-1), select some glyphs, right-click and choose Autohint TrueType from the context menu:

And it even gets better than that: When you run the Autohint TrueType command from the context menu, be it in Font or Edit view, it will also add vertical stem hints. But it only does so if you have vertical TT hints (‘x-direction’) defined in the TTF Stems parameter in Font Info > Masters.

Also, TT hints now work better on outline intersections and in corner components. If you ran into issues before, please give it another try. In further news, delta export, TTF Stems import, and the hinting preview in the TT Instructor (I) have been improved. Overall, TTF export is much snappier now.

Doing stuff with AAT? You’ll be happy to hear that Glyphs now uses the new default location of ftxenhancer app: /usr/local/bin/ftxenhancer. Or you can set your own path with the GSftxenhancerPath preferences. Paste the following line into Window > Macro Panel and press Run:

Glyphs.defaults["GSftxenhancerPath"]="/Applications/Utilities/ftxenhancer"

Needless to say, adapt the path to the right of the equal sign to wherever you have put your ftxenhancer.

Encodings, Languages, Scripts and Localisations

Portuguese, Korean, French and Chinese app localisations have been greatly improved. And while we are at it, it is not only the localisations, but also an increasing number of tutorials that are available in French and Chinese! Many thanks to Nathalie Dumont as well as Liu Zhao and her students for their continued, fantastic input.

But, so many more things happened here, it is hard even for ourselves to keep track. To give you just a few highlights:

  • The Chinese sidebar has been subcategorised with the most useful groups of glyphs:

    And while we were at it, we also improved sorting for Chinese. And with the help of the nice students at the Gengdan Institute, we were able to update a few UI translations, including some plug-ins in Window > Plugin Manager. Special thanks to Yang Xicheng, Liu Yezhao, Dake, Neil and many others who helped so nicely, xièxie!
  • Bopomofo is now treated (and listed) among the CJK scripts.
  • The Korean sidebar is updated with the latest Adobe-KR and traditional KS X 1001 codepages. This comes with an adapted Korean cmap and the new ROS:

    Many thanks to Minjoo Ham, Aaron Bell, Daekwon Kim, Han Hyewon and all the other nice people at Sandoll for their invaluable input!
  • Hangul glyphs can now be auto-aligned as well.
  • Improved Bulgarian Cyrillic sidebar entries, thanks to Krista Radoeva and Botio Nikolchev.
  • Khmer: sidebar and GlyphData are improved, and mark positioning has been overhauled as well. Thanks to Ben Mitchell and Sovichet Tep for their input!
  • Devanagari sidebar and GlyphData has been improved, thanks to Kimya Gandhi and Rob Keller.
  • We added Uppercase Georgian to the glyph database.
  • More Canadian native languages have been added to the GlyphData.
  • Much better handling of marks inside an Arabic sample string.
  • Glyphs now keeps not only Unicode values but also names for Private Use Area glyphs.
  • Double encodings in CID-keyed fonts now work as expected.
  • Plane 16 Unicode values (U+100000 through U+10FFFF) are handled properly now.
  • More scripts are now recognised and treated as RTL, e.g., oldHungarian and phoenician.
  • Improved filtering of kerning between different scripts (thanks Fritze).
  • Many improvements have been made in the vertical layout mode.

Whoa, that was a lot, and we didn’t even scratch the surface, I can assure you. To sum it up, especially if you find yourself working with Asian scripts, you will notice an improvement, one way or another.

Font View

In the Font tab (Cmd-Opt-1), one of the most important functions is filtering the glyph set to what you need to see for your next task. We have two great pieces of news about list and smart filters for you. They may seem insignificant at first, but may have quite an impact on your workflow. Read on.

You can now add plain unicode characters in list filters. Instead of spelling out the glyph name, simply type the character with your keyboard (or whatever input method you prefer).

If there is a glyph with the Unicode assigned, it will be shown when filtered. If added from the list, it will create the corresponding glyph. It’s that easy.

We improved and added Smart Filter options:

  • Has Hints: now only applies to actual TT and PS hints (i.e., ignores corner and cap components, which technically are implemented as hints).
  • Has PostScript Hints: if set to Yes, lists glyphs with PS-style manual hints (stem and ghost hints).
  • Has TrueType Hints: if set to Yes, lists glyphs with manual TT hints, added with the TrueType Instructor tool (I).
  • Has Corners: if set to Yes, lists glyphs that contain corner components.

The sidebar has a new category: Number > Small Figures. It contains figures ending in superior or inferior and will list other small figures with .subs, .sinf and subs suffixes. And the Number > Fraction category now actually also contains the fraction glyph. Duh.

You can now print the glyph grid in Font view directly from Finder: Select the .glyphs file, and choose File > Print or simply press Cmd-P. The file will quickly open in Glyphs, the print job will be sent off to your most recent printer, and the file closes again. Handy if you need glyph overviews of multiple files. Thanks to Jürgen for the suggestion. And with the help of your input (special thanks to Jelle), we could improve the printing output for most printers.

In further news, we were able to improve Font view layout in certain circumstances (thanks Inka!), and thus get rid of a couple of occasional glitches.

Edit view

To make the glyph names more legible, we are now using a variant of the system font with more legible shapes for characters that can easily be mistaken for others, like the uppercase I, the lowercase l and the zero. Especially in Font view, but also in the kerning panel and the grey info box in Edit view, this will help you spot typos:

You can now paste or drag image data into Edit view, and as soon as you press Cmd-S for saving, Glyphs will generate a corresponding image file in a subfolder called Images next to the .glyphs file. Glyphs is smart enough to use unique file names, so images do not get overwritten.

  • The Select Glyphs window (the one you see, e.g., when you insert a glyph with Cmd-F) is resizable now.
  • Global guides now also show in Brace and Bracket layers.
  • Fixed: when a glyph is duplicated in Edit view, the production name is not duplicated anymore.
  • Glyphs with too many nodes will trigger a warning dialog.
  • Better display of invalid PostScript hints. It was sometimes hard to select way-off hints, and delete them. Not anymore.

OpenType Features

In File > Font Info > Features, all features (provided you do not mistype the feature tag, of course) are listed with their proper full plain-English name now, as described on the Microsoft Typography page:

And again, many small things were improved under the hood. Handling of some features has been improved, including aalt, for instance. Many language- or script-specific automatic feature code snippets have been added and improved. See above for more details.

Oh, and we managed to improve the automatic generation of the mark positioning features, and thus were able to prevent most cases of subtable overflows. If you can still trigger an overflow with one of your files, we are very interested in taking a look at the file. Bring ’em on.

Import and Export

We have completely rephrased the text of what we call the import validation dialog. Yes, the one that appears when you open a font file containing components whose alignment is not explicitly specified, most likely old .glyphs files:

We hope it is much clearer now. Thank you for everyone who gave us good feedback in the forum, especially Dave, Norbert and Toshi!

Speaking of which, import validation will now happen on all imported files, including UFO and TTF. Yeah, I know it can be a pretty pesky dialog, but it is necessary for preventing – or fixing – unwanted component shifts, and thus keeping you in control.

As you can see in the screenshot, the import validation dialog will now indicate the exact layers on which shifts will happen. And, more importantly, it will preselect component shifts that are medium (10+ units) and big (100+ units). Assuming that small shifts are errors in need of correcting, and bigger shifts are more likely to be intentional, you can now go through the dialog really quickly.

Do we have more import/export improvements? You bet. here’s a quick rundown:

  • Improved copying and pasting outlines between Glyphs and Affinity Designer. If you are a convert, you can finally drop Illustrator now.
  • Glyphs will now happily import many compiled fonts at once. As many as you can throw at it.
  • When you import an existing compiled OpenType font, Glyphs now does a much better job reverse-engineering the feature code for contextual substitutions.
  • Generally, importing OpenType feature code has been improved. Any glitches you encountered previously should now be things of the past.
  • largely improved .designspace file import, especially the import of kerning.
  • Glyphs now both reads ad writes display strings to UFO files. This enables you to keep your sample texts when you have to commit to a UFO workflow.

Scripting and Extending

After you press the Install Modules button in Glyphs > Preferences > Addons > Modules, you will now see a checkmark once installation is complete. Better than just waiting for the spinning beachball to stop spinning, eh?

Oh, if you do Python stuff and have not had a look at docu.glyphsapp.com recently, please stop by again. Why? The documentation got an update and a little reformatting, all links should work now as expected.

  • We added an Update button to the vanilla warning dialog, so you can update right away, and don’t have to go digging in the Preferences.
  • You can now access GSFont.axes and GSFontMaster.axes.
  • Do you have a plug-in of yours listed in Window > Plugin Manager? You can now insert links in the description texts. HTML and Markdown are supported.
  • Added Variable Font and UFO support to the Python export function: font.export(Format=VARIABLE/UFO) and instance.generate(Format=UFO). Have fun.
  • Improved handling of callbacks in reporter plug-ins.

… and a few more improvements and bug fixes in the Python wrapper. Thanks to all script and plug-in coders who provide us with valuable feedback!

Hidden Preferences

Some cool new geeky stuff can be triggered with a little Python magic:

Glyphs.defaults["TTPreviewAlsoShowOffCurveIndexes"] = True
Glyphs.defaults["GSShowVersionNumberInDockIcon"] = True
Glyphs.defaults["GSFontViewDarkMode"] = False

And to get rid of them again, either use the same code with False instead of True (and vice versa). Or use the new mekkablue script App > Set Hidden App Preferences. Or, simply delete the defaults, like this:

del Glyphs.defaults["TTPreviewAlsoShowOffCurveIndexes"]
del Glyphs.defaults["GSShowVersionNumberInDockIcon"]
del Glyphs.defaults["GSFontViewDarkMode"]

But what do these settings do, you ask? Fair enough, here is a quick rundown of what they do:

  • TTPreviewAlsoShowOffCurveIndexes (off by default): shows all TT point indexes, including off-curves. See above.
     
  • GSShowVersionNumberInDockIcon (off by default): shows the version number in the Dock icon. Useful when you find yourself switching between app versions a lot. I think it compliments GSShowVersionNumberInTitleBar (introduced in 2.5) really well:

     

  • GSFontViewDarkMode (on by default): if set to False, disables dark mode for the glyph grid in Font view. Useful for those among you who like Mojave Dark Mode, but want to keep all their glyphs black on white. This is what it looks like: Antonia by Typejockeys

Small Things and Big Thanks

As always, many small details have been improved, tiny bugs squished, potential causes for rare crashes fixed. Each one of them, by itself, perhaps too small to mention in a separate paragraph, but in total making for a better experience using the software on a daily basis.

To give you just one example, we improved undoing (Cmd-Z) in many situations, e.g., after Filter > Fix Compatibility, after decomposing nested components, after changing OpenType classes and prefixes in File > Font Info > Features, and after changing zones and stems in File > Font Info > Masters.

Or here is another one I love, because it helps us spot mistakes much quicker. After entering a URL in one of the respective fields in File > Font Info > Font, Glyphs will validate the entry and display a warning:

And we cannot state this enough: As much as Glyphs is a small business that puts bread on the table for half a dozen hard-working people, it has also become a community. And yes, that means you, the Glyphs users. Without your insights, suggestions, input, feedback, bug and crash reports, Glyphs would not be what it is today. Therefore, a big thank you for all your contributions, e-mails, personal conversations, and active participations in one of the industry’s most active web forums.

So, thank you, and keep it coming, please.


Sample Font in Mojave Dark Mode screenshots: Antonia, an upcoming Typejockeys release.

24 January–27 June 2019: Type Design and Lettering at SfG Basel

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Every Thursday this Semester, Reading graduate Matthias Pauwels will give a type design course at SfG Basel. In town? Do not miss this.

Semester course: Type Design and Lettering

Kursziel: Der Kurs bietet AnfängerInnen sowie Fortgeschrittenen die Möglichkeit, eine eigene Schrift zu entwickeln.

Kursinhalt: Wir lernen manuelle und digitale Techniken zur Schriftgestaltung kennen und erproben diese in einem eigenen Projekt. Dabei setzen wir uns intensiv mit Designprozessen auseinander, die essentiell sind, um eine Schriftfamilie von Grund auf zu gestalten, eine charakteristische Display-Schrift oder Schriftbilder (sogenannte Letterings) zu kreieren. Die Software Glyphs unterstützt uns beim Designprozess. Sie ermöglicht das Erstellen von Desktop- sowie Webfonts und lädt uns dazu ein, neue technologische Möglichkeiten wie z.B. «variable fonts" auszuprobieren. Gemeinsam erarbeiten wir auch geschichtliche Zusammenhänge, die das Abbild heutiger Schriften nach wie vor beeinflussen und erklären. Dabei lernen wir Buchstaben als abstrakte Formen wahrzunehmen, um deren visuelle Eigenheiten zu verstehen.

3 March 2019: Corso di Glyphs in Milano

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‘Glyphs è apprezzato oltre che per la sua completezza, anche per l’interfaccia semplice e chiara che lo rendono uno dei migliori strumenti per il type design. Con type design is intende tutto quello che riguarda la progettazione di un carattere tipografico, dall’ideazione alla realizzazione.’

We have nothing to add to that. Except that course participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Corso di Glyphs

  • When?

    3 Marzo, 10.00 – 17.00

  • Who?

    Leo Colalillo

  • Where?

    Milano (da definire)

  • How much?

    EUR 190

  • For whom?
  • Prerequisites

    • Conoscenza degli strumenti per il disegno vettoriale
    • Mac OS X 10.9.5 o successivo

  • Links

    Corso di Glyphs (FB event)

  1. Introduzione al software
    • Cos’è Glyphs
    • Potenzialità
    • Risorse
  2. Strumenti
    • Forme base
    • Gestione delle curve di Bézier
    • Selezione e movimento
    • Strumenti di modifica
    • Guide e zone di allineamento
    • Componenti (accenti)
  3. Funzioni
    • Legature e glifi extra latini
    • Filtri
    • Livelli
    • Trasformazioni
    • Importazione da Illustrator e Fontself
  4. Master e finalizzazione
    • Master
    • Istanze e Interpolazioni
    • Variable Fonts
    • Esportazione

8 February 2019: Glyphs Magic Day in St.Petersburg

$
0
0

Learn how to create variable fonts with Glyphs! Glyphs core team member Rainer Erich Scheichelbauer will hold a Glyphs Magic Day in St. Petersburg. A unique chance for all local type designers to be able to learn all the unique features of Glyphs.

Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Glyphs Magic Day (with Variable Fonts)

  • When?

    8 February

  • Who?

    Rainer Erich Scheichelbauer

  • Where?

    St.Petersburg

  • How much?

    t.b.a.

  • For whom?
  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled.

  • Links

Learn how to:

  • create a variable font from scratch
  • convert an existing Multiple Master setup into a Variable Font
  • prepare outlines for glyph variations
  • trace down and fix errors, avoid potential pitfalls
  • optional settings (custom parameters)
  • useful scripts and plug-ins for the workflow
  • export and test in AI and web browsers
  • animate a glyph in a web browser

You will be taken through a Variable Font workflow, with ample opportunity for questions and feedback. That means that also Multiple Master technology and interpolation in general will be addressed, and the small details that can make a difference.

Plus more Glyphs Magic:

  • color fonts: let your letters shine
  • reusing shapes with corner components
  • saving time with custom parameters

16–18 May 2019: Berlin Letters 2019

$
0
0

We are happy to support the Berlin Letters Festival, and we will be present, among other things, with an introductory workshop!

Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Glyphs: Introduction to Type Design with Sol Matas

  • When?

    Saturday, 18 May 2019
    10:00 – 18:00

  • Who?

    Sol Matas

  • Where?

    Colonia Nova
    Thiemannstrasse 1
    Tor 4, Haus 5, Aufgang 1
    12059 Berlin-Neukölln

  • How much?

    EUR 120

  • For whom?

    This workshop is suitable for designers and those in love with typography. You don’t need to have any previous experience in type design, but you will have a better time if you have some experience drawing Bézier vectors (e.g., with Adobe apps such as Illustrator, InDesign, Photoshop)

    Max 16 participants.

  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled.

  • Links

    All info on the Berlin Letters site

In this one day session, you will be introduced to the type design process and you will have the essential technical knowledge to start your own font. You will create a font from scratch and after attending this workshop you will be able to continue the work on your font by yourself.

Contents:
• Sketching
• Basics of drawing
• Digitizing, adding diacritical marks
• Spacing and kerning
• Generating the font and testing it in Adobe apps

7–10 March 2019: TypeCal Kuwait

$
0
0

For the first time, TypeCal is taking place in Kuwait. There will be plenty of Glyphs workshops, do not miss out on this!

Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Workshop: Make your own Color Font in Glyphs

  • When?

    Thursday 7 March 2019
    12:00 - 16:00

  • Who?

    Rainer Scheichelbauer

  • Where?

    t.b.a.

  • How much?
  • For whom?
  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled.

  • Links

In this fun workshop, learn how to make color fonts of all sorts in Glyphs, and how to implement them. Bonus trick: put your selfie into a font!

You will learn about:

  • color font formats: SVG, COLR/CPAL, sbix
  • creation in Glyphs
  • implementation in current design software and in web browsers

Workshop: Make your own Variable Font Animation in Glyphs

  • When?

    Friday, 8 March 2019
    14:00 – 18:00

  • Who?

    Rainer Scheichelbauer

  • Where?

    t.b.a.

  • How much?
  • For whom?
  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled.

  • Links

In this fun workshop, you will learn how to draw an emoji in glyphs, and get it to animate in a web browser!

You will learn about:

  • variable font setup and export
  • implementation in a web browser
  • basic HTML/CSS for OTVar animation

Crash Course: Arabic in Glyphs

  • When?

    March 2019
    t.b.a.

  • Who?

    Rainer Scheichelbauer

  • Where?

    t.b.a.

  • How much?
  • For whom?
  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled.

  • Links

In this 4-hour intensive workshop, you will create Arabic glyphs and make them work in the font editor as well as in third-party apps.

You will learn about:

  • setting up a Glyphs file for Arabic
  • drawing and constructing Arabic letters and marks
  • implementing Arabic OT features
  • testing your Arabic font

14–16 March 2019: EDCH Salon 2019

$
0
0

Meet us at EDCH Salon 2019 in mid-March in Munich!
More details to follow.

12–13 April 2019: Kirjak 2019

$
0
0

We are happy to support – and will be present at – Kirjak 2019 with two small workshops. The workshops are intertwined with two of Peter Bankov’s infamous rude style calligraphy sessions, in such a way that you will be able to visit both.

Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Workshop 1: Variable font magic with Glyphs

  • When?

    Saturday, 13 April 2019
    Morning session, 3.5 hrs approx

  • Who?

    Rainer Erich Scheichelbauer

  • Where?
  • How much?
  • For whom?
  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled. No prior knowledge of type design required.

  • Links

    Kirjak 2019

In this quick and fun workshop, you will learn how to draw a few letters and an emoji in Glyphs, then export the font, import it into a simple HTML and animate it in the browser!

Workshop 2: Digitise your analog letters

  • When?

    Saturday, 13 April 2019
    Afternoon session, 3.5 hrs approx

  • Who?

    Rainer Erich Scheichelbauer

  • Where?
  • How much?
  • For whom?
  • Prerequisites

    Bring your smartphone and your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled. No prior knowledge of type design required.

  • Links

    Kirjak 2019

Whether you took the morning workshop with Peter Bankov, or if you have any sketches or whether it is simply your own handwriting: bring your analog letters, and turn them into a full-fledged OpenType font in this quick and fun workshop.

8–10 March 2019: Font Seed Letterpress Font Making Workshop

$
0
0

This intensive three-day workshop led by Stuart Sandler and Dathan Boardman of the world–renowned retro type foundry, Font Diner and co-founders of Font Seed, is perfect for designers and letterpress lovers alike who want to learn how to make their very first digital font!

Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Letterpress Font Making Workshop

  • When?

    Begins: Friday 8 March (evening)
    Ends: Sunday 10 March
    This is a three-day workshop with a required Friday night event and participants must be prepared to attend both days and the event.

  • Who?

    Stuart Sandler
    Dathan Boardman

  • Where?

    Hamilton Wood Type & Printing Museum.
    1816 10th Street
    Two Rivers
    Wisconsin 54241

  • How much?

    Space is limited, so reservations and a $125 non-refundable deposit when you sign up are required. The $100 to fulfill the full cost of $225 of the workshop will be due at the beginning of the workshop. (Lunch is available both Saturday and Sunday for $10 per person and includes a beverage.)

  • For whom?
  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled and either Adobe Illustrator or Inkscape. You must be 18 years or older. Bring comfortable shoes and clothes that may get ink on them while you print.

  • Links

    All info and registration: FONT SEED LETTERPRESS FONT MAKING WORKSHOP

The workshop starts off with a Friday night letterpress printing party (7-9pm) where you’ll print and photograph your own specimen with wood type from Hamilton's amazing collection to use as your font reference for the workshop.

On Saturday (9am - 5pm) we’ll be totally focused on vector letter tracing/drawing basics using our scanned reference and our goal is to help you complete a set of 26 capital letters by the end of the day. Dinner is on your own and then join us for a fun evening group activity. On Sunday (9am–2pm), we’ll switch gears and spend the day importing your letters, spacing, kerning and generating your first font!

After lunch, you can keep cooking away on your font or enjoy the rest of the afternoon to print your own letterpress souvenir specimen poster from the original source and the day finishes up at 2:00 pm.

You’ll leave with a strong foundation of how to develop your own typefaces and how to expand on the font you’ve created at this workshop to use as you wish!

23–26 March 2019: Type Days Ljubljana 2019

$
0
0

From the program:

This winter we are organizing a workshop in co-production with Poligon – creative center, which is located in the heart of Ljubljana, Slovenia.

We are going to focus on design of display typefaces, which could be used on poster. As usually we start the workshop fully hands-on and kick off with drawing the type. Further on we continue building a firm concept for a type or a type family. Later, each participant will work on his/her individual typeface in a digital environment. On the Wednesday, the poster of all participants are evaluated and exhibited as large high quality prints.

Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Type Days Ljubljana 2019: intensive type design workshop

  • When?

    23 March – 25 March 2019 with the exhibition on 26 March, Poligon
    Sat – Mon, we start our day with a morning coffee and croissants served at 9 am in Poligon. A lecture with demonstration at 9.30 am, lunch break at 1pm, individual work during the day and group consultations at 5 pm. Refreshment breaks anytime of the day.

  • Who?

    This year our mentor is Alja Herlah. She holds MA from Graphic and Interactive Communications where she focused on designing non-Latin typefaces. After the graduation she broaden her skills as Font Developer in Atlas Font Foundry, Berlin. She is currently living in London, working as Font Developer at DaltonMaag.

  • Where?
  • How much?

    200€ (185€ students) includes breakfast, refreshments and all the tools needed. The price also includes annual Tipo Brda membership (professionals: 30 €, students: 15 €) for all the participants. Only bank transfers are accepted. The complete sum needs to be paid in advance by 1 Mar 2019. In case of cancellation we keep 20 % administrative costs.

  • For whom?

    Students of graphic design, typography, architecture and all other people with some basic experience with type design or calligraphy. Our agenda is to connect people with different skills and backgrounds. You are welcome to bring your own ideas and sketches of type you want to work on them.

  • Prerequisites

    Bring your favourite drawing tools (fineliners, markers, pencils, pens, white-out, a sketchbook, …). A laptop computer is required, we prefer the application Glyphs or FontLab. However, if you work with any other font editor this is not an obstacle. The workshop crew will provide transparent paper and other stationery.

  • Links

    http://www.tipobrda.com/delavnice/type-days-ljubljana-2019/

Along basic and advanced lectures on type design you get known with basic lettering, drawing skills and developing the concept of the typeface. You will be guided step by step throughout the digital workflow: scan preparation, correct vector paths, curve optimisation, automated tasks and prototyping the font.


10–12 April 2019: Love Letters in Mechelen

$
0
0

Whether you’re a beginner or you already have an advanced type design project, Love-letters invites you to participate to its typeface design workshop.

Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Love Letter Type Design Workshop

  • When?

    10–12 April

  • Who?

    Sébastien Sanfillipo

  • Where?

    Brandingtoday
    Begijnenkerkhof 6A
    2800 Mechelen

  • How much?

    EUR 350
    (students or recently graduated: EUR 180)

  • For whom?

    Beginners

  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled.

  • Links

    All info and registration

During the workshop you will analyse the principles of letter drawing based on classical and contemporary models and you will learn the fundamentals of the construction of letter-forms. Depending on the needs of your personal project, special attention will be given to digital type design specifics such as vectorization, Bezier curves, letter spacing, kerning, interpolation and workflow.

3–5 May 2019: Introduction to Type Design at IIT Bombay

$
0
0

A 3-day introductory course that covers theoretical and practical aspects of designing typefaces for Indian scripts.
Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

Course: Introduction to Type Design

  • When?

    03 – 05 May 2019

  • Who?

    Girish Dalvi (IDC IITB)
    Noopur Datye (Ek Type)
    Sarang Kulkarni (Ek Type)

  • Where?

    IIT Bombay, Vanvihar Seminar Hall
    Mumbai

  • How much?

    Academia: ₹ 15,000 + GST
    Industry: ₹ 20,000 + GST
    Full Time Students: ₹ 10,000 + GST
    Foreign National: ₹ 60,000 + GST

  • For whom?

    Professional designers who are interested in learning about type design. Calligraphy and Lettering artists who wish to convert their designs into fonts. Faculty mem- bers from art and design schools who are interested in teaching a course on topics related to type design. Final year students from art and design schools.

  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled.

  • Links

    All info and registration
    Register before 26 April 2019.

This course consists of lectures, class assignments, discussions and case study presentations. Participants will learn about the history of Indian type design, fundamentals of Devanagari typography, multi-script type design, ideation for new typefaces, basics of type design, and font technologies. Discussions will include approaches and issues related to type design, font ownership and licensing, script grammar and aesthetic preferences, decolonising type design, and upcoming technologies. Being a hands-on course, participants will work towards developing ideas for new typefaces, and will create a font with a limited set of characters.

29 March 2019: Making a Difference in Beirut

$
0
0

Glyphs team member Rainer Scheichelbauer will hold a public lecture at American University Beirut in March. See you there!

Making a Difference: Type Design and Politics

  • When?

    Friday, 29 March 2019
    18.00

  • Who?

    Rainer Scheichelbauer

  • Where?

    Lebanese American University
    Beirut Campus
    Tabbara Street, بيروت, لبنان

  • How much?
  • For whom?

    Public lecture, open for everyone.

  • Prerequisites
  • Links

This public lecture will be about what type designers can do (and have done) in terms of political engagement.

Includes: Yes, but can OpenType and Variable Fonts do this? — A fun tour de force of what you can do with OpenType features and variable fonts.

After the lecture, there will be some time for Q&A.

25–30 April 2019: Jakarta Typeweek 2019

$
0
0

Jakarta Typeweek is a collaboration program between Indonesian Graphic Design Association (ADGI) and Tokotype Studio in Indonesia about type design for beginners and intermediate graphic designers. Our goal is to present intensive classes focused on type design, from history, theory, designing, and engineering.’

Type Design Course

  • When?

    25–30 April 2019,
    10.00–16.00 h

  • Who?

    Gumpita Rahayu
    Deni Anggara
    Boyan Nurdiansyah

  • Where?

    Jakarta Creative HUB Jl. Kb. Melati 5 Tanah Abang, Kota Jakarta Pusat, Daerah Khusus Ibukota Jakarta 10230

  • How much?

    IDR 5.000.000 (USD 350), discounts available for students, ADGI members, and early birds (before 4 April)

  • For whom?

    Beginners & intermediate graphic designers
    10 participants max

  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled.

  • Links

    Jakarta Typeweek

Program ini mencakup pembelajaran mengenai pengetahuan prinsip desain huruf digital yang dibimbing oleh para instruktur kami, dengan memperkenalkan teori desain huruf melalui presentasi, diskusi setiap individu, serta praktik perangkat lunak Glyphs App yang digunakan dalam proses mendesain huruf. Peserta akan mendapatkan pengetahuan melalui referensi dan perspektif kami untuk membantu memahami struktur kunci dari bentuk huruf, serta teknik dan teori lanjutan dalam memproduksi huruf OpenType sesuai dengan standar industri.

25–26 May 2019: Glyphs at Typomania 2019

$
0
0

Meet us at this year’s Typomania Moscow International Festival, the ‘cultural and educational project dedicated to the type, typography, calligraphy, lettering, motion-design, interactive design. Typomania is held in Moscow annually since 2012. The festival is focused on the letter, word, language.’ The festival comprises ‘poster and book exhibitions, lectures, workshops of Russian and foreign specialists in graphic design, typography, digital arts, typography video contest, book store and other events.’

Font Magic: things you did not know your fonts could do (public lecture)

  • When?

    25 May

  • Who?

    Rainer Erich Scheichelbauer

  • Where?

    Moscow Museum,
    Zubovsky boulevard, 2

  • How much?
  • For whom?
  • Prerequisites
  • Links

    Program in Russian and English

Can animations be put into fonts? And what about colors, pictures, or even games? Learn the answer to these questions, and how Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan sparked the gamification of fonts, in this short and fun presentation. This presentation contains no prepared slides, all typing is done live on stage!

Glyphs Magic Day (workshop)

  • When?

    27 May

  • Who?

    Rainer Erich Scheichelbauer

  • Where?

    t.b.a.

  • How much?

    t.b.a.

  • For whom?

    No prior experience in type design required, some experience with vector drawing tools (e.g., Illustrator) useful.

  • Prerequisites

    Bring your MacBook with Glyphs 2 preinstalled. Participants receive an extended trial license and can purchase their own full license at a discount.

  • Links

    Typomania 2019 Workshops

Learn how to:

  • create a variable font from scratch
  • prepare outlines for glyph variations
  • trace down and fix errors, avoid potential pitfalls
  • optional settings (custom parameters)
  • useful scripts and plug-ins for the workflow
  • export and test in AI and web browsers
  • animate a glyph in a web browser

You will be taken through a Variable Font workflow, with ample opportunity for questions and feedback. That means that also Multiple Master technology and interpolation in general will be addressed, and the small details that can make a difference.

Plus more Glyphs Magic:

  • color fonts: let your letters shine
  • reusing shapes with corner components
  • saving time with custom parameters
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