Dukane
Dukane
Typography is the design and arrangement of the simple graphic glyphs that embody language. A typeface conveys tone and emotion, often before a single word is read. Each character is shaped by centuries of use, misuse, and reinvention; these glyphs aren’t static, they mutate to reflect shifts in culture and technology. Type carries the fossil imprints of its evolution: the serifs of the Roman chisel, the flourish of pen on parchment, and more recently, the mechanical construction of pixels and Bézier curves. The anatomy of a typeface – its ascenders, bowls, terminals, x-height – operates as a kind of dialect; a grotesque sans and a humanist serif speak with very different inflections. Typography is rarely neutral – it encodes values like reliability, luxury, rebellion, sincerity, intimacy. True geometry rarely reads well to the human eye. Letters must often be subtly distorted to look correct. Circular letters like “O” overshoot the baseline and cap height to appear optically aligned; vertical and horizontal strokes differ in thickness to appear equal. These imperceptible adjustments are foundational to good type design.
Dukane
Dukane Character Set
About
A type research trip to the New York Public Library unfortunatley turned up little of interest, but the media on which the books had been archived proved to be more interesting than the content itself. Dukane is taken from scans of the ‘lead-in’ strip of a vintage microfiche film. Named after the library’s ‘Ducane Explorer’ reel-to-reel 35mm readers, Dukane has been used on work for another New York mainstay: Marvel Comics and their numerous X-Men spin-off titles.