MyFonts Home
“Designing a theater poster? Type theater poster!”
 
Cart
HomeFind FontsWhatTheFontCDsSpecialsStarletsMy AccountHelp

How to Buy
Help: How to Buy This Font

Designers
More Fonts by
Josef Tyfa,
Frantisek Storm

Foundries
More Fonts from
Storm


Related Albums:
John's Album
Gale's Album
Lady Shoe In
Koji's Album 6
Aaron's Album III
reflections
1930s classic
Paul's Album
Rafael's Album
Modern Fonts
Aaron's Album II
Judy's Album

Font Family
<< previous | next >> | up to Family Tree | index

Juvenis

 from Storm

Juvenis is a Storm font family with 16 styles priced from $76.00.

Click a Purchase Options button below to view pricing and availability information for a particular group of fonts, or see purchase options for the entire family.

Juvenis
228975; ; English
228975; ; Western Europe
228975; ; Central/Eastern Europe
228975; ; Baltic


Juvenis LightPurchase Options
  Juvenis Light Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Light Italic Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Light Bold Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Light Bold Italic Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
$76.00

Juvenis BookPurchase Options
  Juvenis Book Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Book Italic Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Book Bold Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Book Bold Italic Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
$76.00

Juvenis TextPurchase Options
  Juvenis Text Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Text Italic Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Text Bold Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Text Bold Italic Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
$76.00

Juvenis MediumPurchase Options
  Juvenis Medium Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Medium Italic Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Medium Bold Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
  Juvenis Medium Bold Italic Basic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianDingbats & Symbols
  Preview Imageadd to album
$76.00

Design Credits

First seen on MyFonts: January 14th, 2004
Designed by: Josef Tyfa, Frantisek Storm
Designed when: 2002
Design owned by: Storm
MyFonts Keywords: none [suggest]


Juvenis

Designs of characters that are almost forty years old can be already restored like a historical alphabet – by transferring them exactly into the computer with all their details. But, of course, it would not be Josef Tyfa, if he did not redesign the entire alphabet, and to such an extent that all that has remained from the original was practically the name. Tyfa published a sans-serif alphabet under the title Juvenis already in the second half of the past century. The type face had a large x-height of lower-case letters, a rather economizing design and one-sided serifs which were very daring for their time. In 1979 Tyfa returned to the idea of Juvenis, modified the letter “g” into a one-storey form, narrowed the design of the characters even further and added a bold and an inclined variant. This type face also shows the influence of Jaroslav Benda, evident in the open forms of the crotches of the diagonal strokes. Towards the end of 2001 the author presented a pile of tracing paper with dozens of variants of letter forms, but mainly with a new, more contemporary approach: the design is more open, the details softer, the figures and non-alphabetical characters in the entire set are more integral. The original intention to create a type face for printing children’s books thus became even more emphasized. Nevertheless, Juvenis with its new proportions far exceeds its original purpose. In the summer of 2002 we inserted all of this “into the machine” and designed new italics.

The final computer form was completed in November 2002. All the twelve designs are divided into six variants of differing boldness with the corresponding italics. The darkness of the individual sizes does not increase linearly, but follows a curve which rises more steeply towards the boldest extreme. The human eye, on the contrary, perceives the darkening as a more fluent process, and the neighbouring designs are better graded. The x-height of lower-case letters is extraordinarily large, so that the printed type face in the size of nine points is perceived rather as “ten points” and at the same time the line spacing is not too dense. A further ingenious optical trick of Josef Tyfa is the figures, which are designed as moderately non-aligning ones. Thus an imaginary third horizontal is created in the proportional scheme of the entire type face family, which supports legibility and suitably supplements the original intention to create a children’s type face with elements of playfulness. The same applies to the overall soft expression of the alphabet. The serifs are varied; their balancing, however, is well-considered: the ascender of the lower-case “d” has no serif and the letter appears poor, while, for example, the letter “y”, or “x”, looks complicated. The only serif to be found in upper-case letters is in “J”, where it is used exclusively for the purpose of balancing the rounded descender. These anomalies, however, fit perfectly into the structure of any smoothly running text and shift Juvenis towards an original, contemporary expression. Tyfa also offers three alternative lower-case letters *. In the case of the letter “g” the designer follows the one-storey form he had contemplated in the eighties, while in “k” he returns to the Benda inspiration and in “u” adds a lower serif as a reminder of the calligraphic principle. It is above all the italics that are faithful to the tradition of handwritten lettering. The fairly complicated “k” is probably the strongest characteristic feature of Juvenis; all the diagonals in “z”, “v”, “w”, “y” are slightly flamboyant, and this also applies to the upper-case letters A, V, W, Y. Juvenis blends excellently with drawn illustrations, for it itself is modelled in a very creative way. Due to its unmistakable optical effect, however, it will find application not only in children’s literature, but also in orientation systems, on posters, in magazines and long short-stories.



About UsTestimonialsSell Your FontsBecome an AffiliateSite MapSign In

MyFonts   245 First Street   17th Floor   Cambridge MA 02142   USA
MyFonts and MyFonts.com are registered trademarks of Bitstream, Inc.
WhatTheFont and Starlets are trademarks of Bitstream, Inc.
Copyright © 1999–2008 Bitstream, Inc. PRIVACY POLICY

Shady characters should send email to gibbs@myfonts.com. Thanks to typography.com for the idea.