home
***
CD-ROM
|
disk
|
FTP
|
other
***
search
/
Amiga Mag HDD Backup
/
Amiga Mag HDD Backup.zip
/
Amiga Mag HDD Backup
/
Alexander.img.bin
/
Alexander.img
/
***AC March⁄April
/
for review
/
Fonts_Text
/
Fonts_Text.ASCII
Wrap
Text File
|
1978-07-16
|
8KB
|
131 lines
Two Great new Font Applications
R. Shamms Mortier
When we think about fonts, we usually think about desktop publishing
applications. Amiga users, however, can also apply fonts and fontshapes, especially
PostScript formats, to 3D art and animation packages aimed at video as well. A few
years ago, there were scant font products available for the Amiga, while PC utilities
abounded. Looked at in one way, that of native font disks, the same is still true (though
the Amiga has made some progress in this area). But guess what. We needn't be so
parochially minded any longer. With the 2.x and 3.x Workbench software has come the
capability to access myriads of native PC disks of fonts and graphics, many in the
PostScript format. I want to tell you about two new packages that I have recently
discovered that open the way to all sorts of possibilities. Don't be offended that these
come on PC disks, because the Amiga platform can easily access this data, and
Amigans can then use the graphics for their own purposes.
The Best Font Package in a Long Time
If you love letters, then you love letters crafted by masters of calligraphy, the art
of carefully designing each stroke in the hand lettering process. Up until now, there
have been a lot of packages that have used the name "calligraphy" to promote their
wares, but most were just a thin reminder of what the calligraphic art is really about. As
I said,.. "up until now". Enter "Callifonts" from a company of the same name on Dallas,
Texas. The fonts come in both PostScript and TrueType formats. I used the PostScript
versions and copied them to my hard drive, inside the FinalWriter (from SoftWood)
drawer. I can call them up whenever I use FinalWriter. Why am I impressed with this
package?
It all began when I received their promotional piece in the mail some months
ago. They sent out a large piece of parchment paper (18" x 24") covered front and back
with the most delicious hand-crafted appearing fonts that I had ever seen anywhere
except in type book collections from the last century. "Surely", I mused "these letters
were penned by the hand of a master". When it finally dawned on me that I was looking
at computer fonts, I tucked the promo sheet away, longing for the moment when my
wallet could accommodate the investment. When that time arrived, I ordered the
package (I ordered the PC package, though these come for the MAC as well,.. Emplant
owners take note).
As luck would have it, one of the disks was defective. I called, and within two
days I had a replacement disk. When I called, the proprietor asked me what I intended
to use the fonts for. I nervously blurted out that whatever my applications, that they
would be on the Amiga platform. "Oh", he responded, "we have dozens of Amiga
customers". No wonder. If you can swallow the insult that these are not native Amiga
disks and get on with your creative life, you will be absolutely blown away by both the
quality and variety represented here. About half of the fonts come in Upper and lower
case, and about half come in only a single case (usually upper). This is because the
original varieties that these alphabets are a copy of, some hundreds of years old,
sometime were created in only one case. Now I have revived some creative wishes that
I once had regarding producing some poetry chapbooks and other art oriented
publications. Oh yes. These fonts are just what the doctor ordered for doing certificate
work and other similar DTP projects. I cannot overemphasize the high quality of these
resizable font families, and would think that if you have any connection to desktop
publishing whatever, these will be in your library asap. Not to slight video users, there
are two ways to apply these fonts in that arena as well. One is to capture a screen on
which you've used these fonts to spell out information (great for titling that calls for a
warmer human touch). Another application might be to use a 3D program that allows
you to import PostScript formatted data (Aladdin-4D, LightWave), and then to translate
the fonts into 3D objects for further manipulation. It's in the DTP arena, however, that
your use of these babies will really shine. Run out and buy this package.
Deniart Systems: Truetype and Type One Symbol Fonts
An exercise in graphic enhancement
Do you know what a "drop cap" is? I'm sure you've seen them, even if you may
not have known what they were called. Drop caps are used at the start of manuscripts,
usually on the first letter of a paragraph, to emblazon that latter with graphic
embellishments. This was especially true in medieval times, and extremely flowery
drop caps can be appreciated on such ancient works as old biblical texts and the archaic
Celtic Book of Cells. Deniart, a company in Toronto, Canada, offers type
embellishments that nobody else has as yet tapped into. They call their works
"Historical Symbol Fonts" and right now that includes Egyptian Hieroglyphs,
Alchemical Symbols, and Castles and Shields.
Just imagine using one of these (or more) integrated into your standard text.
What a way to make your clients take notice, and also to personalize your
communiques. And if you're a creative story writer and artist, what a way to capture
your reader's imagination. All of these Deniart images are PostScript compatible, which
means that they are completely resizable as far as your DTP work is concerned. The
Egyptian Hieroglyphic manual is a quality tutorial in Egyptian phonetic writing, and is
crafted as a quality instructional text. The Alchemical Symbols manual is the same. The
Castles and Shields manual is more of keyboard layout scheme for the symbols of
which there are four types: number designs, "shield" designs with lowercase letters
inside of them, "castle" silhouettes with letters, and castles without letters. Number
keys access number symbols, lower case letter symbols are accessed from lower case
keyboard eqivalents, and upper case accordingly. It is this last group (accessed by using
the Shifted number keys and a few others on the keyboard) that I want to mention as far
as video use is concerned.
The Deniart castles graphics that have no letters associated with them are
absolutely perfect for tracing and extruding to construct 3D castles for animation
purposes. These graphics are two color (black and white) silhouettes, so they work very
nicely as far as translation into 3D object outlines. You can either trace them manually
or use a utility program like Axiom's Pixel3D-Pro to automate the process. The first
thing to do is to Print a chosen castle to the screen, grab it, and save it out as a 2-color
graphic. This can be accomplished with any screen grabber utility (I use ImageFX2
from Nova Design). Then you can translate the art into a PostScript file as mentioned
earlier.
From there it's a simple matter of porting the finished 3D structures into your
favorite 3D program and rendering with texture and attribute choices. I used
Aladdin-4D to obtain the results in the accompanying figure. Deniart's 2D castle
graphics are a great resource for novel 3D imagery.
Callifonts
MSLP: $129.00 for 66 fonts
PO Box 224891
Dallas, Texas 75222
(214) 504-8808
Deniart Historical Symbols
MSLP: $99.00 for three sets
Box 1074, Adelaide Station
Toronto, Canada M5C 2K5
(416) 941-0919
Captions
Figure 1. The FinalWriter screen shows off a few of the Callifonts varieties, truly a
splendiferous way to spice up your words.
Figure 2. The Deniart Castles and Shields variants are shown here in all of their forms.
Boxed in are the "no letters" castles.
Figure 3. Using the techniques mentioned in the text, a stone and sand texture was
mapped to these Deniart 2D graphics in Aladdin-4D, creating an interesting castle
scene. Pixel3D-Pro from Axiom was used to translate the graphics, and some additional
touchup was accomplished with Digital Creation's Brilliance painting software (color
was added to the castle flags, and the "river" was added).