Never Use Futura by Doug Thomas, Paperback, 9781616895723 | Buy online at The Nile
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Never Use Futura

Author: Doug Thomas  

Conceived around the directive commonly given to students, this is the first major English-language book to concentrate on Futura, using the foundational typeface to open up an alternate history of modern graphic design.

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Summary

Conceived around the directive commonly given to students, this is the first major English-language book to concentrate on Futura, using the foundational typeface to open up an alternate history of modern graphic design.

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Description

It’s everywhere, including the moon (on the commemorative plaque left by Apollo 11 astronauts), Nike sneakers, Barbara Kruger, Ed Ruscha, and Jenny Holzer artworks, 2001: A Space Odyssey credits, Domino’s Pizza boxes, Absolut Vodka bottles, and Red Bull cans. Richard Nixon used it for his presidential campaign, as did Hillary Clinton. Indeed, Futura is one of the most-used fonts in the world today—the typeface of modern design—more so even than Helvetica. This fascinating book explores the cultural history and uses of a face that’s so common you might not notice, until you start looking, then can’t escape it. Douglas Thomas traces Futura from its Bauhaus-inspired origin in Paul Renner’s 1924 design, to its current role as the go-to choice for corporate work, logos, motion pictures, and advertisements. Never Use Futura is illuminating, sometimes playful, reading, not just for type nerds, but for anyone interested in how typefaces are used, take on meaning, and become a language of their own.

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Critic Reviews

“"Thomas offers a thoroughly researched, exhaustively documented story of a typeface that is so ubiquitous that to remove it would be to erase much of what today's world looks like. The book is extremely readable, with a breezy style and an almost gossipy, "did you know" tone. The book would be a terrific source of information for graduate students who want a semiotic analysis of a style or genre, or a researcher wanting to trace the influence of a particular motif through various iterations. Thomas does just that with his recounting of artist Barbara Kruger's use of a 1946 movie poster for her style standards and then the appropriation of Kruger by others, including the fashion brand Supreme. Never before has font design moved so prominently into the psyche of the common person. This book both reflects and accelerates that trend." - Choice-- -”

"Anyone who loved "Helvetica" will enjoy this look at the history and widespread use of the typeface Futura, which you won't be able to stop noticing after you've read Douglas Thomas's excellent book."
- Fast Company's Co.Design
"Futura's ubiquity makes Never Use Futura an essential handbook on the way the modern world looks and how we read its words."
- PopMatters
"It tells a smart, incisive story about the way one typeface became woven into our cultural sentiments and movements."
- Design Observer
"Never Use Futura is well written, entertaining, and informative."
- Technical Communication
"Never Use Futura, by Douglas Thomas, is an incredibly thorough exploration and investigation of Futura, a bold alternative to the perhaps equally popular (and equally divisive) Helvetica. In short, it puts Futura in social and historical context. Aside from being quite fascinating in subject, I found the design and layout to be absolutely beautiful - another reason why Never Use Futura is easy to pick up and surprisingly hard to put down."
- Typo-Graphical
"This engaging new book by Douglas Thomas, a graphic designer and historian, is a biography of the typeface that explores what its wide usage means and why it is so popular."
- Architecture Boston magazine
"Thomas offers a thoroughly researched, exhaustively documented story of a typeface that is so ubiquitous that to remove it would be to erase much of what today's world looks like. The book is extremely readable, with a breezy style and an almost gossipy, "did you know" tone. The book would be a terrific source of information for graduate students who want a semiotic analysis of a style or genre, or a researcher wanting to trace the influence of a particular motif through various iterations. Thomas does just that with his recounting of artist Barbara Kruger's use of a 1946 movie poster for her style standards and then the appropriation of Kruger by others, including the fashion brand Supreme. Never before has font design moved so prominently into the psyche of the common person. This book both reflects and accelerates that trend."
- Choice

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About the Author

Douglas Thomas is a graphic designer and type historian. He holds a Masters of Art in History from the University of Chicago. He has taught graphic design at Brigham Young University and the Maryland Institute College of Art. He is the author of “Recasting Franklin as Printer” in Benjamin Franklin’s Intellectual World, published by Fairleigh Dickinson University Press (2012). His design work has been featured in Communication Arts, Print, and Graphis. He lives in Baltimore, Maryland.

Ellen Lupton is a writer, graphic designer, and director of the Graphic Design MFA program at Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA) and of the Center for Design Thinking. As curator of contemporary design at Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum since 1992, she has produced numerous exhibitions and books, and she has published several books with PAPress, including Design Culture Now; Inside Design Now; Graphic Design: The New Basics; Thinking with Type; Type on Screen; D.I.Y.: Design It Yourself; and D.I.Y. Kids.

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Product Details

Publisher
Princeton Architectural Press
Published
17th October 2017
Pages
208
ISBN
9781616895723

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