My first advanced font, with composite curves!
About 30 years ago, when I was in highschool, I used to draw words in my notebooks, with lettering that looked like this using the pre-printed squares in my notebook. It was infinately cruder, and had no shading... So for my first font ever, and since the work sheet very much resembles that squared notebook from way back when, I figured I would recreate it!
This time as a soft, kind of bubble-block font. Capital letters only.
Binary ASCII font, based on computer QWERTY keyboard key frequency. Enjoy! :D
etaoinsrhldcumfpgwyb,.vk()_;”=‘x/0$*1j:{}>q[]2z!<?3+5\4#@|6&987%^~`
is the entire character list in their frequency. Left for being the most frequently used, and to the right; less frequently used.
If you were to paste the above string of characters into the User Input, you'd get a familiar binary pattern.
My font theme is systematic, I aimed to make a font that was precise and but also referenced technology in the patterns of a motherboard and the pixelated style. The dots also help form the illusion of curves.
This font uses the idea of destruction to break up the individual letters. The effect of the destruction comes from a bullet going through each of the letters and not stopping, which is why the line is at the same level for each letter. The line is clean to show the speed in which the bullet would be travelling.