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TDC2 2004 Award Winners
The Type Directors Club of New York awarded these typefaces a Certificate of Excellence in Type Design in its annual TDC2 competition.
These selections won the recognition of the jury at the annual type design competition organized by the Type Directors Club of New York, a non-profit professional organization dedicated to educating its international membership and the graphic arts community about type, type design, and its myriad of uses in the field of communications.
The contest was judged by Veronika Elsner, Josh Darden, Dmitry Krasny, Pablo A. Medina. Charles Nix chaired the jury.
This Fontlist shows all the winning designs that are offered through FontShop.
FF Angkoon is fits into the French tradition of personal, idiosyncratic type design, exemplified by faces like François Ganeau’s Vendôme or Albert Boton’s Eras. There is also a non-Western influence mixed in: Xavier Dupré created FF Angkoon while living and working in Cambodia. Though it was not his intention to capture elements of Sanskrit or characteristics of Angkor temples, he may admit... Read More
Argentinean designer Eduardo Manso created the Bohemia type family in 2003. Bohemia's cunning and elegant essence shows off refined letters that evoke the Transitional style typefaces like Baskerville, though most Baskerville-like designs tend not to be as curvaceous as Manso's! True to form, Bohemia shines in smaller text sizes, like 9 point and above, while still maintaining a unique... Read More
Sava is a calligraphic capitals and small capitals design by Jovica Veljović. Available in six weights--light, regular, medium, semibold, bold and black--it includes support for most western and central European languages, as well as for Greek and many Cyrillic languages. Typographic features include a series of non-standard ligatures and a large collection of specialized Byzantine... Read More
A grown-up, no-nonsense sibling to Erik Spiekermann’s popular FF Meta, FF Unit irons out many of the quirks of its predecessor, dialing back the warmth to a comfortable, if a bit cool, room temperature. Set at small sizes, FF Unit’s legibility is aided by its increased contrast and simplified forms, all of which (a, g, i, j, l, U, M) have alternates. First released in 2003, FF Unit later... Read More