Should curved strokes end at the same height?

Ori Ben-Dor
Posts: 386
These are taken from a Hebrew typeface I'm working on, so there are no Latin letters. Anyhow, notice the inconsistency in the curved strokes: each ends at a different height. Would you say that's a problem?




Tagged:
1
Comments
-
No, it's not a problem. These glyphs have very different internal white spaces and require different degrees of intrusion by those curved strokes to look balanced.
4 -
Well, luckily the euro and the dollar signs aren't likely to follow each other as they do here, but suppose they were (or imagine they were C and S), doesn't it look bad that their strokes end almost at the same height but not exactly?0
-
Basically it's a matter of thresholds: when they're close "enough", snap them; but don't make that an objective of itself.2
-
Sounds like a reasonable approach, thanks. Would you snap my euro/dollar signs, for example?0
-
Yes. If I didn't make the curves in the $ much shorter.2
Categories
- All Categories
- 46 Introductions
- 3.8K Typeface Design
- 475 Type Design Critiques
- 555 Type Design Software
- 1.1K Type Design Technique & Theory
- 638 Type Business
- 829 Font Technology
- 29 Punchcutting
- 506 Typography
- 120 Type Education
- 312 Type History
- 74 Type Resources
- 109 Lettering and Calligraphy
- 30 Lettering Critiques
- 79 Lettering Technique & Theory
- 528 Announcements
- 84 Events
- 110 Job Postings
- 164 Type Releases
- 169 Miscellaneous News
- 274 About TypeDrawers
- 54 TypeDrawers Announcements
- 118 Suggestions and Bug Reports