Willow (typeface) explained

Willow is the name shared by two typefaces.

ITC Willow

ITC Willow
Style:Decorative
Date:1990
Creator:Tony Forster
Foundry:ITC

ITC Willow was designed by Tony Forster in 1990. Although a contemporary typeface, Willow is the reminiscent of the Scottish Arts and Crafts style made popular by painter and social reformer Jessie Marion King (1875–1949), and architect and designer Charles Rennie Mackintosh (1868–1928) of the Glasgow School. The face is based upon a sign for the Willow Tea Room, one of three tea rooms in Glasgow designed by Mackintosh. The typeface is distinct for the double crossbars on the uppercase A and H, and the unusual design of the uppercase O, which is raised above the baseline, with two dots centred beneath the bowl.

Willow Regular

Willow Regular
Style:Display
Date:1990
Creator:Joy Redick
Foundry:Adobe Type

Willow Regular was designed by Joy Redick in 1990, and is part of the Adobe Originals Woodtype Collection.

Popular culture

The American television series American Horror Story and its spin-off series American Horror Stories features a variant of ITC Willow* prominently in the episodes as well as the series logotype itself.[1] The font used was actually a slightly edited version of The Charles Rennie Mackintosh Font, which was purchased specifically to use on the show. This features a modified letter "O" and slightly closer character spacing than the original. Its use was notable among TV and movie buffs since it has never been regarded as synonymous with the horror genre.

The Charles Rennie Mackintosh Font was also used in the motion picture Spider-Man 2. It featured in the display signage for the Broadway play (Oscar Wilde's "The Importance of Being Earnest") in which Mary Jane Watson (Kirsten Dunst), Peter Parker's on-off girlfriend, was appearing. The movie's director, Sam Raimi, spent some time in Glasgow, Scotland, at the Glasgow School of Art, the institute attended by (and later re-designed by) Charles Rennie Mackintosh himself. Raimi became a big fan of Mackintosh's work and specifically asked for this font to be used in the making of the signage.[2]

The City of Berkeley, California uses the Rennie Mackintosh font in its logo and official communications.[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bailey . Shawn . 10 May 2014 . Why Is The 'American Horror Story' Font So Creepy? . 30 March 2017 . The Inquisitr News.
  2. Web site: ITCS代写 | 地表最专业的留学生程序代写 .
  3. Web site: 8 Cities That Have Their Own Distinctive Fonts . 21 January 2021 . Gizmodo . 27 January 2015 . en-us.