Thanks for posting! The sketch with the bar graph is getting the closest to expressing the historical context for Officina Sans. The stacked lowercase is too precarious, though -- you might try rotating the text instead, and using each line of text as a bar in the graph?
Experiment with the different languages of office documents: business cards, memos, emails, stationery, powerpoint presentations, etc. The bar graph is good. Business communications are a big part of Officina's reason for being, and would show off the typeface's personality and strengths.
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ReplyDeleteThanks for posting! The sketch with the bar graph is getting the closest to expressing the historical context for Officina Sans. The stacked lowercase is too precarious, though -- you might try rotating the text instead, and using each line of text as a bar in the graph?
ReplyDeleteExperiment with the different languages of office documents: business cards, memos, emails, stationery, powerpoint presentations, etc. The bar graph is good. Business communications are a big part of Officina's reason for being, and would show off the typeface's personality and strengths.