The poster I chose is David Carson the unique design of the lowercase d combined with an uppercase C brings out a unique perspective to the name. Although the C is the first thing I notice it helps create the d for his name, it may be the last name initial, and then the first initial it can be read and the design is uniquely thought out. The typeface is hard to come across based on the design of the poster, I believe traditional sans serif with an emphasis on the heavy weight of the combined letters.
KEY INFO
Professor
Beth Tondreau (Mary-Elizabeth)
Email
mtondreau@citytech.cuny.edu
Office Hours
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 11:00am to 12:00pm, Pearl-116 (after class).
Course description
A foundation course in typography with emphasis on using type in industry-related applications from print to interactive. Students will be introduced to principles of type design and terminology
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Ursula C. Schwerin Library
New York City College of Technology, C.U.N.Y
300 Jay Street, Library Building - 4th Floor
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I applaud your choice, Brandon. David Carson deconstructed traditional typography (even though he had grounding in a very clean Swiss principles), so Rocco Piscatello’s poster is a nod to Carson’s hard-to-come-across approach.