What is it about Canadians and Type Design?
There must be something in the water in Canada. It seems there are far more people involved in type design who are from Canada than the size of their population would support. Maybe long winters make people glyph skilled? Other than the Netherlands, I can't think of a single country with more type centrics per capita.
I wonder if all Canadians on Typophile would tell us what they think is common to their life that brings out the talent and inclination to pursue design type? Whatever the reason, I am glad it happens :-)
ChrisL




3.Oct.2005 9.25am
What is it about Canadians, period.
hhp
3.Oct.2005 10.09am
For the October issue of the magazine I write for, I interviewed a calligrapher,
Alice Young : www.calligraphy.ca - www.islandmagic2007.com .
Best,
AS
3.Oct.2005 11.20am
Alessandro,
Perhaps it is the lovely scenery then?
Good to hear from you,
ChrisL
3.Oct.2005 11.36am
What is it about Canadians, period.
We ask the same question about Americans.
The Canadian Government doesn't treat the water with flourides, but with glyphlets, and the fronts that control the weather here originate in Hattem, The Netherlands. Our bullets are typographic, and our pentagons are used to structure page geometry. The frost on the windowpanes here crystallizes according to a bezier logic, but if it is really cold the serifs snap off.
3.Oct.2005 9.08pm
...can’t think of a single country with more type centrics per capita.
Some of us live in Vansterdam, which can influence your outlook on a few things. Canadian Marshall McLuhan wrote a whole book about our Gutenburg Galaxy: The Making of Typographic Man, and many of us can blame Veer.
As for ...Candians period: Like Trudeau said about Americans: "Living next to you is in some ways like sleeping with an elephant. No matter how friendly and even-tempered is the beast, if I can call it that, one is affected by every twitch and grunt." So a lot of us define ourselves in contrast to Americans.
Jon
3.Oct.2005 9.20pm
What is it about Canadians, period.
Yeah, like universal health care– what's up with that? Freakin' communists... ;)
3.Oct.2005 9.36pm
Speak of the devil(s):
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/4306936.stm
hhp
3.Oct.2005 9.57pm
Another amusing pastime is seeing how many of the most famous American comedians of the last 25 years are actually Canadian. It's like, >50% - really weird.
T
3.Oct.2005 10.12pm
Speak of the devil(s):
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/4306936.stm
Interesting that there are 3 Canadian cities in the top 10.
pd
3.Oct.2005 11.40pm
I'd like to think it has something to do with a certain embarrassment in watching George Bush make our neighbours to the south look really, really bad; and by that I mean that his (and, by unfortunate proxy, their) seemingly imperative need to draw as much attention as possible; and by that I mean that up here there is a century-long drive to define Canadian as not-American and thus, maybe, there is a desire to be less conspicuous; and by that I mean that we either fool or berate ourselves into thinking that by being less conspicuous we're more humble, more restrained, more 'dignified,' and all of these, I think, are key characteristics of decent typography. We also tend to see isolation and lack of recognition as romantic, which also fits well. If the goal of good typography is to be understated, Canada's a great place to do it from.
(The fact that I've been hesitating to hit the "Post comment" button for the past 10 minutes and have re-read the above paragraph about 20 times, wondering if it's too obnoxious, also speaks to this attempt at decorum, and this kind of obsessive-compulsive behaviour is probably also common in the type-inclined.)
3.Oct.2005 11.46pm
just out of curiosity — why do you think that "Other than the Netherlands, I can’t think of a single country with more type centrics per capita."
and why " It seems there are far more people involved in type design who are from Canada than the size of their population would support."
4.Oct.2005 7.32am
I grew up in a bilingual city, Montréal, which is also the home to many immigrant communities. (A secondary school trip to the Northwest Territories allowed me to hear and see the Inuktitut language.) As a result I was surrounded by language, both spoken and written, and when I worked at a typesetting bureau, I was taught how to set French, which is not how one sets English. So I understood that type is not an inflexible system of marks, but is a living thing.
So, that's my theory. You get yourself a humble multi-lingual country, throw in some long winters for good measure, and you get "slow-makers", people who take their time on long-term projects, like writing novels and making typefaces.
4.Oct.2005 8.23am
I'm not entirely convinced by this. I have a feeling that we'll find the US still has more active type designer per capita than any other country. Perhaps Yuri or Adam can provide us with the proportion of FontLab sales by country - or is that a bad way of measuring this?
It’s a shame there was no report for Canada in this year’s ATypI country delegate report.
Si
ATypI country delegate for the USA
4.Oct.2005 8.35am
humble
heh. ;^P
4.Oct.2005 8.45am
Another amusing pastime is seeing how many of the most famous American comedians of the last 25 years are actually Canadian. It’s like, >50% - really weird.
Indeed, though I found when I lived there, that Canadian comedy (television comedies, mostly) were terribly un-funny. Perhaps it is due to my odd sense of humor, but I couldn't stand to watch Canadian shows, however they do allow bad words after bedtime, so I'll give them credit for that.
4.Oct.2005 8.57am
If every funny person has left Canada for the US it does make sense.
ƒ
4.Oct.2005 9.06am
Yee
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thread.
4.Oct.2005 9.09am
Jason, good stuff.
> not how one sets English.
How so?
Certainly, living in a multi-cultural society, or better yet a multi-scipt one (I had three) opens your eyes much more to the undercurrents of Shape.
> the US still has more active type designer per capita
You really think so, more than the Netherlands?
Zara, what about British humo[u]r?
hhp
4.Oct.2005 10.58am
> You really think so, more than the Netherlands?
Looking at the numbers The Netherlands population is about 16 million, the US about 293 million - so for every active Dutch type designer you'd need 19 active US type designers - that might be pushing it. But I would not be surprised if Yuri has sold more than 19 times the number of FL licenses to US residents than Dutch residents. 'spose it just depends on the definitions you pick.
FWIW Canada's popualtion of 32.5 million is about 1/9 of the US.
Si
4.Oct.2005 11.15am
Indeed, though I found when I lived there, that Canadian comedy (television comedies, mostly) were terribly un-funny
Obviously, you never watched The Red Green Show...
4.Oct.2005 12.04pm
Hello Chris Lozos, thanks.
Yeah, I'm after a period, I moved to Turkey.
I will copy a piece of the interview.
***
I live in a place that is green and wild: rural Vancouver
Island, British Columbia, Canada. It is one of those
places where civilization is just touching wilderness, so
my home is surrounded by tall cedar and hemlock forests,
rocks, mosses and wildlife. My house is small, with a
large natural garden frequented by various types of
animals - but ruled by my dog and cat!
Despite its remote location, Vancouver Island is rich with
art and culture. The First Nations in this area have a rich
artistic heritage, and there are many totems and carvings.
I am a graphic designer at Suburbia Advertising in
Victoria, BC, a small, upscale advertising agency
employing fourteen people, and specializing in retail
advertising. My background includes seven years of working
at larger international ad agencies in Toronto, Canada. Not
surprisingly, I love working with type!
Like many kids, I doodled on my schoolbooks, and even
though drawing was one of my favorite pastimes, I always
doodled letters rather than drawings, on my books. (Alex,
do you know what doodling is?! Strange word, no?)
I remember clearly the moment I first encountered 'real'
ink… I was probably about thirteen, sitting at my brothers
drafting table. He had an ink pen meant for sketching, and
I picked it up and started drawing letters. I remember
watching the dark liquid become animated – so unlike the
ballpoint pens and markers I was used to. I was entranced.
Not long after that, I bought my first calligraphy set and
my goal that summer was to spend one hour each day
practicing.
My life since then has included long periods where I put
calligraphy aside, in favor of my work - design and
typography, but something keeps pulling me back to
calligraphy. The magazine "Letter Arts Review has been
inspirational and key to my picking up the pen again, many
times. Over the years I have watched calligraphy grow and
evolve on it's pages. Also, when I was younger, I knew I
would do more calligraphy when I was older – what a
surprise!, I'm older now! :)
***
Best,
AS
4.Oct.2005 12.37pm
"I have a feeling that we’ll find the US still has more active type designer per capita than any other country."
Nah, I don't think we'll find that's true. If we used "per capita" by its most frequent meaning it would not be true. The United States is a huge country and consists of many different states (regions). In a country so large there are differing mentalities and opinions that are often regional. Being a guy from the Mid-West who has lived on the East Coast and now the West Coast these places could all be different countries. New York City has more in common with London than it does with West Virginia.
Now, if we were to use the per capita definition and apply it by state we might be on to something. But considering how concentrated the American population is on the extreme coasts I don't think it'd be accurate to use "per capita" in the U.S. I'd be willing to bet money that there are less than 7 type designers in South Dakota.
Even in New York City I personally know of maybe two people who design typography. Groups of college friends deciding to start a type foundry together doesn't happen here in the U.S. very often, but I hear about it all the time in Europe.
I think the U.S. has a basic lack of respect for the arts and design. There's too much of a "get a real job mentality" that persists here. If that weren't true, there would be more Ph.D. art and design programs as well as a Master's and Undergraduate type design programs.
Just 'cuz I like drawing, don't mean I'm dumb.
4.Oct.2005 12.57pm
See this google battle.
http://www.googlebattle.com/index.php?domain=South+Dakota+typography&dom...
although the Netherlands beats South Dakota 2:1 the population of The Netherlands is almost twenty times that of South Dakota. Per capita South Dakota is ten times more typographic than the NL.
Somewhat more seriously if you define a type designer as someone who has designed a font from scratch, either as a custom (non retail) design, a retail design, or created a freeware or shareware font in say the last five years I'd guess that you could easily find over 2000 US residents who would qualify. Could you find 100 Dutch or 200 Canadians? Possibly in the case of the Dutch but Canada, I doubt it.
I think the US economy/education system encourages activities like type-design - I know there are plenty of part-time/hobbyist type designers out there (maybe they need a distraction from their day jobs or school work) and there are plenty of jack-of-all-trades graphic designers who are forced to dabble in type design with respect to paying projects.
Si
4.Oct.2005 1.54pm
I'm not so sure about all of this, but I think more than Canada, there is definitely something in the water in the area around the Netherlands and Scandinavia. Not only type design, but design in general. Melding utilitarianism of what could be called modernism with the warmth and quaintness of another era long since forgotten.
Comparing is a dangerous thing. Better to simply appreciate that the world is made up of a wonderful variety which makes friendly competition spawn the desire for growth and improvement of self.
4.Oct.2005 3.18pm
Comparing is a dangerous thing. Better to simply appreciate that the world is made up of a wonderful variety which makes friendly competition spawn the desire for growth and improvement of self.
Now that is a very Canadian attitude. I agree wholeheartedly.
Up with Canada! (but not so far up that some other country might think that we are claiming to be better than anyone else... verily, even though we may think we have the best society on earth, we wouldn't want to make anyone feel bad about their own countries.) :)
pd
4.Oct.2005 4.43pm
Gee, I thought I was appreciating other parts of the world. I didn't mean to start people thinking it was a Canada vs the U.S thing. I didn't even mention the U.S. I was just attempting to compliment Canada on having such a positive affect on type design. My straw poll was just my experience on Typophile and the people I met at TypeCon. I don't think very highly of Bush either but he doesn't even know how to spell typography let alone affect it.
I was kinda hoping for more stories like Chester's humorous yet acurate post above. Chester, thanks for having a sense of humor. You probably need it on cold Winter nights when your hard disk dies and you lose all of your work--at least you can swear in a couple of languages :-)
ChrisL
4.Oct.2005 7.41pm
Chris, the winter was the reason I left Montréal for London. (Actually, it wasn't. Who needs an excuse to move to London?) In all events, I, like many of my fellow Canadians, did some time abroad. I am now based in New York, another place with winter.
5.Oct.2005 7.30am
Jason:
You wrote "(...) there is a century-long drive to define Canadian as not-American"
Are they pushing the country off the continent? I'll stay tuned to see how they finally manage to do it. ; )
-An american colleague (from México)
5.Oct.2005 7.54am
The Winters in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania helped me decide to move to northern Virginia 30 years ago. I would imagine the Canadian Winters to be even longer.
ChrisL
5.Oct.2005 9.44am
Canadians do have a sense of humour, if different in some ways from other parts of the world.
Winter in my part of Canada doesn't get cold until mid November and ends about mid February with the first blooming daffodils. I cringe when my fellow BCers make this statement in the presence of eastern Canadians, but in this case it seemed justified. The temperature here rarely drops colder than about 25 degrees Farenheit. That covers the Canadian Winter.
Regarding whether or not Canada has a greater amount of type designers per sackful than the rest of the world: who cares?
I believe that all of us involved in type design, whether in Zanzibar or Spuzzum, are drawn to it by its grace, truth and beauty.
And now for a Canadian joke . . .
Jim
5.Oct.2005 10.25am
I had never really thought about there being lots of Canadians involved in type, but perhaps because there is so little sense of community. I see Jim Rimmer from time to time, and Ross Mills of course, but apart from that I'm more likely to meet other Canadian type designers at conferences in Europe than I am to meet them at home. Nick Shinn lives so far away he might as well be in another country. If I want to play the western alienation card, I could say that he is in another country.
5.Oct.2005 10.46am
"... but perhaps because there is so little sense of community."
Perhaps that is part of it all. Type design seems a rather solitary endeavor where people work in solitude and meet occasionally at conferences. I met more Canadians at TypeCon (Nick Shinn among them) than Americans and it was held in NYC.
Jim, I'll have to visit western Canada during Winter but I won't squeal on you about the mild Winters to any of the eastern Canadians :-)
ChrisL
5.Oct.2005 10.48am
John, maybe ATypI should organize geographic chapters?
hhp
5.Oct.2005 11.48am
The ATypI country delegate program allows for multiple country delegates, so you could easily have one in Western Canada and one in Eastern Canada, you could even have one for northern Canada perhaps representing the minority scripts used by the original Canadian communities. As mentioned earlier there was no Canadian delegate report this year, but I don't know if there's a current delegate or not.
Having said that you need the volunteers. We have two US delegates, unfortunately both located in the same town. Hopefully in my report I represented the whole country by asking various US-based type people to review and contribute to my report.
Si
5.Oct.2005 11.55am
Mosh, I was of course speaking ideologically (culturally, on the other hand, we're sucked right in to all that US hoopla and flash, but we seem to like to think we "know better"). As for geography, there's been a looming threat for decades of a giant earthquake swallowing Vancouver Island (where I live), so perhaps there is a collective mentality trying to move away from "America"?
Regarding type design & typography, I think the point many up here would touch on is that romantic sense of isolation, wide open space, blah, blah; that is, finding somewhere quiet to focus on the work. Bringhurst seems a good example, tucked away in the trees of the Gulf Islands sculpting away on his laptop.
5.Oct.2005 12.30pm
Simon, is MS a US state, or a country? :-)
Hermitism: to me, it's for artists, not craftsmen.
hhp
5.Oct.2005 1.03pm
>Simon, is MS a US state, or a country? :-)
It was certainly nice to be invited to contribute an MS report. I hope I gave appropriate credit to other technology companies who are innovating in the type and type technology space. I think Henrik had included non country reports in the past, and I hope his replacements do the same. I agree with those on the ATypI list that there should be room for delegates representing internationally used scripts and writing systems (eg Arabic & Cyrillic) but I think finding volunteers prepared to put in the effort will be hard.
5.Oct.2005 1.15pm
Chris: Please look me up if you ever get to the west coast. Wear flip flops.
John: You are right, there aren't many type designers here. Ted Staunton works away at it in Surrey, and that's about it as far as I know. Maybe there are heaps of type designers in Winnipeg, Toronto and Montreal.
Jim
5.Oct.2005 1.18pm
"...Wear flip flops."
LOL!
I sure will Jim:-)
ChrisL
5.Oct.2005 2.35pm
Hey if you regionalize the type designers, maybe there is a type sports league to be formed. I could see the Canadian west coast team vs. the Canadian east coast team in a game of glyphs (what ever that is). Maybe you could even wear helmets with cute glyphs on them.
5.Oct.2005 3.07pm
Glyph Hockey?
:-)
ChrisL
5.Oct.2005 3.10pm
Golf
5.Oct.2005 3.14pm
Another idea for a typographic game show (like at TypeCon): Name That Font! The host reads a short description, then asks the participants how few glyphs then can name the font in. "Tiffany, I can name that font in... one glyph!" Would be a nice change from the classic type quizzes.
hhp
5.Oct.2005 3.18pm
a typographic game show:
Glyph of Fortune
5.Oct.2005 3.18pm
Canadians are physical types, something like Glyph hockey makes sense to me. Hey that was a two line pass! (Pro hockey starts its season tonight)
5.Oct.2005 3.21pm
Off topic, dave did you back up your computer, its already the 5th.
5.Oct.2005 4.03pm
Someone should start a thread on typographic gameshows - "Iron Font" would be my choice, with Kent Lew being the host.
Si
6.Oct.2005 7.22pm
I've gotta say this place is my first interaction with a community of typographers, but then I don't get out much. I've never met a typographer in Montreal, or in person.
I stumbled on this (possibly following a link someone posted here) http://www.porchez.com/ateliertypo/?c=atelier+uqam
and was stunned. I didn't know such things existed at UQAM. (Perhaps because I've had my head stuck in Concordia for too long... hmm. I wonder if ConU does stuff like this, too?)
As for winters, you Islanders, I'll post pictures of Montreal's massive snow banks and the fun I have parking my car (or shovelling it out) every morning... but it's better than 6 months of rain any day. You know You're in Montreal when the inside of your nose freezes and sticks together.
Kristina
7.Oct.2005 12.03am
What about them, ellipsis... You are what you eat, right? Then forget McDo. Great minds comes from ... well, you guessed it. Large tempests that grow in the south seas, make their way slowly to the great white north, but not before leaving most of the useless particles behind them. What is left is of great advantage to the people of Canada, since type designers will benefit from what grows from the land. It is fair to say that it has to be a gift from the heavens. In the summer, (yes, there is summer over there) the country that is known to have igloos for shelter instead of houses as most south bordeans that could not pinpoint it on a globe are lead to believe, those icy blocks have a tendency to get a little softy, but winter wise are as hard as rock, just like metal typefaces. So then, creativity that comes from the land of the ice cubes is apparently a natural gift, enough to make jealousy grow in the world around them. PERIOD.
7.Oct.2005 3.11am
I don't know about the water, but I do know that the Belgian Luc Devroye who teaches at McGill University in Montreal, and to whom I look frequently for links to many many type sites as well as commentary, has probably inspired a few to become type designers, type geeks, whatever. Luc is at http://jeff.cs.mcgill.ca/~luc/fonts.html