Hi all,<p>I've been getting more interested in typography, to the point where I'd like to start experimenting with illustrating letterforms and general type design, but other than "just start drawing on paper" I'm not sure where to begin.<p>The first four pages of Google results for "illustrating letterforms" literally all point to a book called Drawing Type[1] (similar results for similar queries), but flipping through the preview on Amazon, the book looks to be more for inspiration than instruction.<p>How do I get started here? What are good introductory resources? What are the tools of the trade?<p>Thanks for reading :)<p>[1] http://www.amazon.com.br/Drawing-Type-Introduction-Illustrating-Letterforms/dp/1592538983
If you’re in the UK, Reading university have a renowned Typography department and they run a two week short course in typography design. Might be worth a trip even if you’re not in the UK.<p><a href="http://www.reading.ac.uk/typography/Shortcourses/typ-shortcoursesTDi.aspx" rel="nofollow">http://www.reading.ac.uk/typography/Shortcourses/typ-shortco...</a>
Well I'm of the camp when starting out to get your hands dirty whatever the means, I suggest is getting a free typeface editor and start by modifying an already made free/open source font (A good exercise is: take one you think is in some way horrible and can be done better, then see what it takes to fix it). As you experience you will learn, research, and connect to find solutions/show progress.<p>Secondly here is an interview with a notable type designer - Ray Larabie, <a href="https://www.myfonts.com/newsletters/cc/200905.html" rel="nofollow">https://www.myfonts.com/newsletters/cc/200905.html</a> Which might be an inspirational.<p>Hope that helps.