Marlborough Titling v0.1

Created during the 10 week introduction to modern type design workshop at Letterform Archive.

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Women’s Relaxed Poplin Shirt

Project Management:
Eleanor Donohue
Yehrin Park

Art Direction:
Carla Poirier

Design:
Annie Szafranski

Copy:
Abbey Abate

Photography:
Andrea Drake
Grace Brumley
Stephanie DeAngelis

Year:
July 2017
Men’s Air Tee

Project Management:
Eleanor Donohue
Yehrin Park

Art Direction:
Carla Poirier

Design:
Annie Szafranski

Copy:
Alex Applegate

Photography:
Andrea Drake
Grace Brumley
Stephanie DeAngelis

Year:
July 2017
Women’s Box Cut Tee

Project Management:

Eleanor Donohue
Yehrin Park

Art Director:
Carla Poirier

Design:
Annie Szafranski

Copy:
Alex Applegate

Photography:
Andrea Drake
Grace Brumley
Stephanie DeAngelis

Year:
June 2017
Women's Scuba

Project Management:
Shea Jackson

Art Direction:
Lee Cerre

Design:
Annie Szafranski

Copy:
Alex Applegate

Photography:
Andrea Drake
Grace Brumley

Year:
October 2015

To help kick off 2023, I signed up for a 10-week type design workshop, Introduction to Modern Type Design, through the Letterform Archive. It was my first official Letterform Archive workshop after years of support from afar, and also the first workshop I've taken specific to type design. Kel Troughton of Overlap Type taught the class, along with James Plattner, who TA'd (he also just released Outgo through Overlap Type). We had some lovely surprise guests towards the end of the workshop, like Libbie Bischoff of Type Du Nord and James Edmondson of OhnoTypeCo—super inspiring!

The goal of the IMTD workshop was to get our feet wet in the world of type design and finish the class with a type concept of our own that we continually developed throughout the class. Due to the length of the course (and the level), we certainly weren't expected to come out with a complete type family. Instead, we'd have all the uppercase and lowercase letterforms, numerals, and select characters—whatever we had time for.

Thus, Marlborough Titling was born! (v0.1). Marlborough Titling is shamelessley inspired by an old hand painted sign from the local video store that shut down years ago—Kensington Video. I have been obssesseed with this sign and fortunately had the pleasure of meeting the person who hand-painted it for their family-owned business. The name comes from the street where the sign was hand-painted.

Working on Marlborough Titling has definitely been challenging, but also so much fun and an incredible learning experience as a graphic designer. It's a lot more complicated than it looks. Some of the biggest challenges for me, were getting the weights balanced on all the characters (including between uppercase and lowercase), setting the best character spacing, and creating the punctuation—so a good amount of it.

One of my favorite parts of this project was envisioning and creating the lowercase character set out of reference material that only included uppercase letters. Thinking about the specific qualities and characteristics that made up Marlborough Titling was a fun exercise. I hope to acquire the software soon and jump back into creating Marlborough Titling in a complete regular weight in order to focus on the edits I need to make without expanding the scope of my first type design project.

Introduction to Modern Type Design

Taught by Kel Troughton through Letterform Archive