![Alright sans font](https://kumkoniak.com/102.jpg)
![alright sans font alright sans font](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/04/19/24/04192497aa3334418cdf0937e1eb1a50.gif)
When I went to the eye doctor, I thought, Wow, I’m going to be twice as productive!” I have astigmatism, which makes me see an F like an E. “My eyesight has gotten worse I just got glasses for the first time. You can only change a very tiny bit about the way a letter looks before someone either can’t read it or notices it. “Why does the a have a tail when nothing else does? Look back at the last few hundred years: The a has always had a tail. You have to make the interesting letters work with the boring letters.” “I tend to start with a mixture of simple letters, like an o or an n, and letters that have a lot of personality, like an r or a g. It feels really refreshing and contemporary.”
![alright sans font alright sans font](https://d1ly52g9wjvbd2.cloudfront.net/img16/A/L/Alright-Sans-ExThin0.png)
It’s set in a custom version of Helvetica, which is the most boring typeface, but they redrew it to look awesome. “ My favorite magazine right now is Bloomberg Businessweek. I took what works about Century and the personality of Baskerville and tried to turn that into Harriet.” Century is the cleanest, most mechanical typeface, but it has almost no personality, whereas Baskerville has way too much personality. “Baskerville, from the 1730s, set the stage for Bodoni, which evolved into Scotch Roman, which turned into Century. So I started drawing Harriet, and it really quickly stopped being a Baskerville.” Either the italic was too flourishy and floral or the bold got wonky and wide.
![alright sans font alright sans font](https://d1ly52g9wjvbd2.cloudfront.net/img16/A/L/Alright-Sans-Black01.png)
The font was Baskerville, which is gorgeous, but when I’ve tried to use it, it didn’t work. “A friend wanted to know what font a fashion magazine-something like Vogue Paris-was set in. In advance of the January release of his second effort, Harriet, we quizzed him on the evolution of an alphabet. It’s a tedious job, but Cavanaugh’s first endeavor, Alright Sans, has been a bestseller on for two years and was named one of the best typefaces of 2010 by Communication Arts (the typographical equivalent of an album going platinum and snagging a Grammy). Jackson Cavanaugh spends his days in his Logan Square apartment with his cat, A’postrophe, scrutinizing how his lowercase g looks alongside his r and, since a font should work in some 60 languages, how his Icelandic edh looks alongside his thorn. But where do fonts come from? To find out, we turned to one of the world’s few full-time typographers. These days, when we write, we type-which might help explain two recent documentaries on typography: 2007’s Helvetica and 2009’s Typeface.
![Alright sans font](https://kumkoniak.com/102.jpg)