type Archives - https://everydaymonkey.com https://everydaymonkey.com Fri, 15 Jan 2021 07:48:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://everydaymonkey.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/cropped-favicon_wp-32x32.png type Archives - https://everydaymonkey.com 32 32 A Word Is An Image: Ricardo Gonzalez’s Typography Art https://everydaymonkey.com/a-word-is-an-image-ricardo-gonzalezs-typography-art/ Fri, 15 Jan 2021 07:48:34 +0000 https://everydaymonkey.com/?p=11969 Ricardo Gonzalez has an inherent passion for letterforms. This passion, he admits, stems from his childhood in Mexico, recalling how he was mesmerized by his grandfather’s old letters written in Spencerian in the 1950s. A graphic designer focused on lettering, typography, calligraphy, typeface design, he adheres to the notion that “a word is an image”. […]

The post A Word Is An Image: Ricardo Gonzalez’s Typography Art appeared first on https://everydaymonkey.com.

]]>
Ricardo Gonzalez has an inherent passion for letterforms. This passion, he admits, stems from his childhood in Mexico, recalling how he was mesmerized by his grandfather’s old letters written in Spencerian in the 1950s. A graphic designer focused on lettering, typography, calligraphy, typeface design, he adheres to the notion that “a word is an image”.

“It’s an interesting and unique career,” admitted Gonzalez in an interview with ADC. “Letterforms are everywhere and it’s something that is in our everyday lives. Exploring letterforms, styles, their history, their construction is a neverending path and that’s what I love about it, it is a lifetime learning journey.”

Incidentally, Gonzalez’s love affair with typeface could itself be described as a lifetime learning journey. Born in Mexico, he moved to Canada in 2008 where he studied graphic design and later worked as a screen-printer. It was during this time that he rediscovered his passion for calligraphy and began to experiment with letterforms.

But it would take some time until he would become a full-time typography artist. After working as a freelance graphic designer in Toronto, in 2012 he moved back to Mexico, to work full-time as an independent designer. Then, in the summer of 2014, Gonzalez moved to New York City to attend Type@Cooper where he earned a typeface design diploma from Cooper Union.

“I didn’t plan this career, it has been taking shape as I go,” he admits. “But I do remember looking at a few designers around the world who were making a living out of it, which made me believe it is possible to make a living of what you love.”

The work process itself, he explains, depends on the project. “I can start using tracing paper and brush pen but I can also start in the computer or maybe a combination of both. I try to explore new media, techniques, styles, and combine it with my work.”

With selected clients as prominent as Apple, Armani Exchange, Nike, Bentley, Google, Microsoft, Pepsi, and Facebook—he’s clearly got his work cut out for him.

The post A Word Is An Image: Ricardo Gonzalez’s Typography Art appeared first on https://everydaymonkey.com.

]]>
Add a Vintage Flair to Your Business with Hand Painted Signs https://everydaymonkey.com/add-a-vintage-flair-to-your-business-with-hand-painted-signs/ Tue, 10 Nov 2020 16:15:00 +0000 https://stagingemd2.wpengine.com/?p=9222 Sign painting is a meaningful craft with a meaningful history. Practitioners often acquired the craft through apprenticeship or trade school, but as computer design erupted, interest in the craft waned. The commercial signs of dem olden days, which were all painted by hand, offer a kind of beauty and uniqueness that today’s industrial signs have been unable to duplicate. But […]

The post Add a Vintage Flair to Your Business with Hand Painted Signs appeared first on https://everydaymonkey.com.

]]>
Sign painting is a meaningful craft with a meaningful history. Practitioners often acquired the craft through apprenticeship or trade school, but as computer design erupted, interest in the craft waned. The commercial signs of dem olden days, which were all painted by hand, offer a kind of beauty and uniqueness that today’s industrial signs have been unable to duplicate. But luckily for us, traditional sign painting has experienced a resurgence in popularity in recent years.

One of these new-traditional-sign painters is Chris Mackenzie-Gray. Based in the UK, his sign-painting services range from very small door numbers to large-scale murals, all painted with that vintage flair.

According to Mackenzie-Gray, it was while studying graphic design at LCC, that he was drawn to the analog processes of writing. “With a computer, it’s not difficult to change the layout or grid, whereas with letterpress, you have to really think about what you’re doing because it’s such a faff to change something,” he explained in an interview with Lecture in Progress.

“I did a whole bunch of research into sign painting, and one of my tutors shut down the idea,” he recalled. “Maybe they didn’t consider it graphic design, or a viable job but I just remember thinking, ‘well, that’s not something I’m going to think about again.’ I really enjoyed graphic design, but sitting at a computer nine hours a day would have left me feeling very drained.”

Today, there is only one trade school left in the U.S. for sign painting: the Los Angeles Trade Technical College. But the renewed interest in hand-painted signs might bring to the forefront the glory of typography art. For some sign painting inspiration, follow Toucan Signs’ Instagram page.

The post Add a Vintage Flair to Your Business with Hand Painted Signs appeared first on https://everydaymonkey.com.

]]>
ersion="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> type Archives - https://everydaymonkey.com https://everydaymonkey.com Fri, 15 Jan 2021 07:48:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://everydaymonkey.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/cropped-favicon_wp-32x32.png type Archives - https://everydaymonkey.com 32 32 A Word Is An Image: Ricardo Gonzalez’s Typography Art https://everydaymonkey.com/a-word-is-an-image-ricardo-gonzalezs-typography-art/ Fri, 15 Jan 2021 07:48:34 +0000 https://everydaymonkey.com/?p=11969 Ricardo Gonzalez has an inherent passion for letterforms. This passion, he admits, stems from his childhood in Mexico, recalling how he was mesmerized by his grandfather’s old letters written in Spencerian in the 1950s. A graphic designer focused on lettering, typography, calligraphy, typeface design, he adheres to the notion that “a word is an image”. […]

The post A Word Is An Image: Ricardo Gonzalez’s Typography Art appeared first on https://everydaymonkey.com.

]]>
Ricardo Gonzalez has an inherent passion for letterforms. This passion, he admits, stems from his childhood in Mexico, recalling how he was mesmerized by his grandfather’s old letters written in Spencerian in the 1950s. A graphic designer focused on lettering, typography, calligraphy, typeface design, he adheres to the notion that “a word is an image”.

“It’s an interesting and unique career,” admitted Gonzalez in an interview with ADC. “Letterforms are everywhere and it’s something that is in our everyday lives. Exploring letterforms, styles, their history, their construction is a neverending path and that’s what I love about it, it is a lifetime learning journey.”

Incidentally, Gonzalez’s love affair with typeface could itself be described as a lifetime learning journey. Born in Mexico, he moved to Canada in 2008 where he studied graphic design and later worked as a screen-printer. It was during this time that he rediscovered his passion for calligraphy and began to experiment with letterforms.

But it would take some time until he would become a full-time typography artist. After working as a freelance graphic designer in Toronto, in 2012 he moved back to Mexico, to work full-time as an independent designer. Then, in the summer of 2014, Gonzalez moved to New York City to attend Type@Cooper where he earned a typeface design diploma from Cooper Union.

“I didn’t plan this career, it has been taking shape as I go,” he admits. “But I do remember looking at a few designers around the world who were making a living out of it, which made me believe it is possible to make a living of what you love.”

The work process itself, he explains, depends on the project. “I can start using tracing paper and brush pen but I can also start in the computer or maybe a combination of both. I try to explore new media, techniques, styles, and combine it with my work.”

With selected clients as prominent as Apple, Armani Exchange, Nike, Bentley, Google, Microsoft, Pepsi, and Facebook—he’s clearly got his work cut out for him.

The post A Word Is An Image: Ricardo Gonzalez’s Typography Art appeared first on https://everydaymonkey.com.

]]>
Add a Vintage Flair to Your Business with Hand Painted Signs https://everydaymonkey.com/add-a-vintage-flair-to-your-business-with-hand-painted-signs/ Tue, 10 Nov 2020 16:15:00 +0000 https://stagingemd2.wpengine.com/?p=9222 Sign painting is a meaningful craft with a meaningful history. Practitioners often acquired the craft through apprenticeship or trade school, but as computer design erupted, interest in the craft waned. The commercial signs of dem olden days, which were all painted by hand, offer a kind of beauty and uniqueness that today’s industrial signs have been unable to duplicate. But […]

The post Add a Vintage Flair to Your Business with Hand Painted Signs appeared first on https://everydaymonkey.com.

]]>
Sign painting is a meaningful craft with a meaningful history. Practitioners often acquired the craft through apprenticeship or trade school, but as computer design erupted, interest in the craft waned. The commercial signs of dem olden days, which were all painted by hand, offer a kind of beauty and uniqueness that today’s industrial signs have been unable to duplicate. But luckily for us, traditional sign painting has experienced a resurgence in popularity in recent years.

One of these new-traditional-sign painters is Chris Mackenzie-Gray. Based in the UK, his sign-painting services range from very small door numbers to large-scale murals, all painted with that vintage flair.

According to Mackenzie-Gray, it was while studying graphic design at LCC, that he was drawn to the analog processes of writing. “With a computer, it’s not difficult to change the layout or grid, whereas with letterpress, you have to really think about what you’re doing because it’s such a faff to change something,” he explained in an interview with Lecture in Progress.

“I did a whole bunch of research into sign painting, and one of my tutors shut down the idea,” he recalled. “Maybe they didn’t consider it graphic design, or a viable job but I just remember thinking, ‘well, that’s not something I’m going to think about again.’ I really enjoyed graphic design, but sitting at a computer nine hours a day would have left me feeling very drained.”

Today, there is only one trade school left in the U.S. for sign painting: the Los Angeles Trade Technical College. But the renewed interest in hand-painted signs might bring to the forefront the glory of typography art. For some sign painting inspiration, follow Toucan Signs’ Instagram page.

The post Add a Vintage Flair to Your Business with Hand Painted Signs appeared first on https://everydaymonkey.com.

]]>