So I called a general meeting of the blog staff, which was pretty
easy since this is a one-woman show. We—that is, I—came to the
conclusion that we should move the weekly post from Sundays to
Mondays. The benefit to us—me—is that if I'm running a little low
on inspiration, I have the whole weekend to cram instead of just
Saturday. The benefit to you is that this post is up now, instead of
six days from now.
I am assuming, of course, that anyone is still here. So...is
anyone still here? Sorry to leave you all hanging like that, but you
know how the holidays can be. What was I talking about again? Oh,
right—fonts you can use for Disneyland-related printed projects!
The nice thing about designing text for Frontierland is that many
online font archives have a category called “Western.”
There is no one description of such fonts, more of a continuum of
design features, but common elements include thick horizontal strokes
contrasted with thin vertical ones, forked serifs, and little “spurs”
(possible pun?) placed at about the midpoint of the vertical lines.
Weathered letters and letters made from planks also bring across an
Old West atmosphere. You have a lot of options here.
Western dingbats are also reasonably common, but here you should be
more selective. Look for images that seem like they could actually
have been produced in the time period of the Old West—ones that
mimic the appearance of early photographs, newspaper prints, and
Native American artwork, rather than cartoons. And of course David
Occhino has another piece of outstanding (free!) work for us, Big
Thunder Dingbats. While you're at it, if you have the means, you
may as well go ahead and purchase the associated lettering, simply
known as Big
Thunder.
Fantasyland is another area where the choices for lettering styles
are obvious...at first. Go ahead and start with “medieval”
lettering—gothic, blackletter, fraktur, whatever you choose to call
it—but nothing too heavy or ornate, which could detract from
the child-friendly atmosphere. One absolutely lovely (and free!)
choice is Bradley,
which is actually used in various Fantasyland contexts, such as the
books of the Sleeping Beauty Castle walkthrough and Mr. Toad's coat
of arms. If that one doesn't do it for you, however, medieval-style
fonts are extremely common, and you're bound to find something
that suits you better.
I would be remiss if I didn't mention JLR
Mouse House, a freebie that places the capitals of the Disneyland
logo lettering against silhouettes of a castle—it's proportioned
more like Orlando's castle than Anaheim's, but this would still look
great as the first letter of a paragraph where Kingdom or one of its
clones was the main font.
Of course, there is far more to the themes
of Fantasyland than medieval castles. You could go in a more
whimsical, storybook direction with fonts like the one named,
appropriately, Storybook. Don't expect to find much in the way of
specific attraction sign lettering, though. Although Fantasyland
includes more film-based attractions than any other land, they all
more-or-less predate the era we find ourselves in wherein film titles
are designed as recognizable logos in themselves—that is, the
attraction signs do not tend to use lettering inherently associated
with the movies on which they are based, and if you're hoping for
exact matches, you'll have your work cut out for you trying to find
them. You're better off going the thematic route—circus
poster-style lettering for the Dumbo attractions, sparkly letters for
pixie dust, etc.
When it comes to dingbats, however, thematic isn't quite sufficient:
you need the characters. And that can be tricky, since not many
Disney character dingbat fonts exist. Fortunately, I am here for you,
and I have discovered some good ones. For characters likely to appear
in Fantasyland, start with Princes
and then comb through Disney
family 1 for the stragglers. You can also find examples of fonts
that combine lettering with pictures of characters; designer
ArtsyLady offers us
a few which, like JLR Mouse House, might be best as paragraph
initials.
What else? When it comes to images that evoke Fantasyland without
being tied to any specific movie...how about heraldry? A row of
decorated shields is magnificently emblematic of not just olden days
of knights and princesses and castles, but specifically the
tournament—the original medieval fun fair. How Disneyland is that?
Fonts depicting such shields are more common than you might think.
Actually, here's one of my favorite examples: Kantonswappen
CHFL. Look familiar? It should if you've read my earlier double
post about heraldry in Fantasyland. These are the coats of arms for
the cantons of Switzerland. Shields with these very images—in full
color, of course—decorate the queue chalet for the Matterhorn
Bobsleds. If you download just one heraldry font for your Fantasyland
needs, it should definitely be this one.
Before we leave Fantasyland, here's a real treat: the Blairesque
font family. If you don't recognize the lettering and the name
doesn't tip you off, that collection of dingbats ought to be the
clincher. This website makes you jump through a few simple hoops in
order to download, but I guarantee it will be worth every click.
Mickey's Toontown is actually surprisingly easy to find fonts
for, especially considering how focused its theme is. When it comes
to lettering, Mickey,
Minnie and Donald
all have fonts named in their honor. This is also where I'd use
Waltograph or
one of its imitators—Walt Disney's handwriting didn't really look
like the company logo, but judging by some of the articles in
Mickey's House, Mickey Mouse's “official” handwriting does.
If none of these suits your purpose, there are loads of fonts out
there that mimic comic book-style printing or slightly off-kilter
handwritten lettering. Hunt around the “handwritten” or “cartoon”
sections of any decently sized font archive until you find
perfection.
Dingbats featuring images of the classic characters are also not hard
to come by. Mickey
Mousebats, CartoonMickey,
CartoonDonald,
and the wonderful surprise Vintage
Classics Disney are among the standouts. Poke around and see what
else you can find. (And if you need more help, I'm always a comment
away!)
Most large font archives have a category called “Futuristic” or
something similar, full of boxy, sharp-cornered, sans-serif typefaces
such as might be reproduced by precision machines. Ironically,
lettering typical of early computer monitors is also sometimes
included in this category, hearkening back to several decades ago
when digital text displays were themselves the stuff of
science-fiction coming to life, never mind that the letters were
blocky and ungraceful. On the grounds that classic Tomorrowland is
itself a product of this era, I see no reason not to take these
concepts and run with them.
That said, it's interesting to note that a lot of Tomorrowland
signage, both then and now, actually uses very plain lettering—simple
sans-serif block print, without much personality, reflecting (I
suppose) an ideal of pragmatism and elegant simplicity. The dressier
fonts are a lot more fun, of course, but your projects will still
look just as Tomorrowland-ish if you restrict said fonts to titles
and the like, and use something like Verdana for your main text.
Okay, you say, but are there any fonts specifically designed for
Tomorrowland and/or its individual attractions? So glad you asked!
The best one from a Disneyland perspective is probably Space
Station 77, which, as its name suggests, replicates the Space
Mountain title font. If you don't mind borrowing from Orlando, the
Seized Future
font family was created in honor of the defunct Alien Encounter
attraction. And then there's Prototype,
which isn't technically from Tomorrowland* but definitely partakes of
the same zeitgeist—it's the lettering used on signs in Epcot's
FutureWorld.
Dingbats are, again, pretty easy—seek out images of planets and
galaxies, rocket ships and circuit boards, and plain old science!
You'll notice that so far I have avoided mentioning the elephant in
the Tomorrowland room: the IP creep. If you need to include Nemo and
Buzz Lightyear in your design work in order to feel like it's
properly Tomorrowland-ish, there are certainly fonts out there that
will serve that purpose. I personally like to honor the Subs, with or
without Nemo, with Maritime
Flags, a font of the flag alphabet used for visual communication
between ships.
As for that other prominent Tomorrowland IP...
It will be upon us soon enough. Whatever our misgivings about this
move on Disney's part, at least the franchise is old and popular
enough that it has been memoralized in font form repeatedly.
Whether you're looking for the famously distinctive title lettering,
the fictional scripts used within the Star Wars universe, or
pictures of the characters and starships, a simple Google search
should bring you exactly what you need.
May the New Year bring you endless inspiration!
* The
website claims it is used there, but I don't think I've ever seen
it...at least in Anaheim.
OMG! That Vintage Classics font is amazing!! Thanks for the head's up! :D
ReplyDeleteMy pleasure! Woodcutter is a really excellent font creator in general, not just for Disney.
Delete