Imagine the world 2000 years later and the language and writing culture had much evolved to the format of simplicity, futuristic, and rigidity. This font was inspired by many sci-fi movies that set on super-human civilization with its own advance in language and cultural symbolism.
Inspired by this print. Not very legible.
Mostly for wall or border decoration (you can read letters, but probably not the numbers). Every vertical line column is a letter(plus connection to previous column)! Have fun!
For dozenal counting system, " ' " serves as "0", "0" is "10", "-" is "11", "_" is "-", ":" is division, "*" is multiplication, ";" is for roots (as the opposite of powers, "^")
Is it Ironic that I spent a lot of time making a minimalistic font? Maybe not...
In any case, this is a font I made with a challenge of keeping every character within a 5x5 block size (4x4 blocks for the lowercase letters)
The only character NOT within a 5x5 square is the @ character. It somehow ended up a little wide.
I spent a lot of time making this font, it is based On the premise that too many fonts are way to ambiguous, so this is a fix for that, also I have added a copyright symbol, I replaced the vertical bar with the copyright symbol, because as far as I know the vertical bar symbol is rarely if ever used...( I have not seen it used in allmost anything I have viewed or read in all my life, except that it is there in the font character listing, so why is it there? certainly a copyright symbol would be more useful don't you think?) as for the "blockiness" of the C in the copyright symbol, keep in mind, that it is designed to have a maximum width of 9 pixels, so for what it is I think it is good, basically you cant get a smaller bitmaped based copyright symbol where it is as crisp and where the c is not pointed like a less than symbol and the c is not "touching" the circle it is in which would make it harder to read... so if you do see fit to use it I hope you are happy with it...
Semi-suprematic font. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suprematism]
See more:
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/60805/myrdle_condensed
https://www.myfonts.com/font/justanotherfoundry/johannes/
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/1522476/stf-praesens
https://fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/90658/coldplay_semi
https://www.fontstruct.com/fontstructions/show/1572949/stf-veroordeeld
Tired of the traditional helvetica being used as the "minimalist font"? Well do I have news for you!
This font is so minimalist, that it's barely legibale to normal people! I'm sure ya'll can have a blast embracing the simple life while giving your coworkers a migraine at the same time!
Try "Extreme Minimalisim" today!
I asked CookieLord and Zephram about how to name this style of font.
And the tags are the answers they gave me.
Thanks! :)
This is a clone of Heavy Vintage~ very minimalistic conscript (for numerous languages) ~
with the basic letters/sounds: «a», «h», «i», «k», «l», «m», «n», «p», «s», «t», «u» and «y» (vowel ligature consisting of «i»+«u»).
new consonants can be created with a dot above or below the consonant (subsequent «"» or «'» resp. on the keyboard), e.g. «p» + «"» = «f». to create new vowels, the existing («a», «i», «u» and also «y») can be linked together with a line («-» on the keyboard), e.g. «a» + «-» + «i» = «e».
with a subsequent short vertical lower or upper line («;» or «:» resp. on the keyboard) you can shorten/soften or lengthen/harden a letter/sound respectively.
a pause can be written with «,» and the end of a sentence with «.».
if you want to write numerals (you don't have to, if you want to keep it simple and minimalistic), you can write them with a preceding and subsequent «,» and then use the letters in between as numerals. like this: 0=a, 1=i, 2=p, 3=t, 4=k, 5=s, 6=h, 7=n, 8=m, 9=u («l» and «y» are not used). you can use the «,» also to separate numbers.