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tonperle 1956

• WBAI 99.5 FM,
   Pacifica Radio in New York City

• WNYC 93.9 FM,
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• YRock 88.5 HD-2,
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• Pandora
  A new kind of radio
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last change June 21 2008

 Details
The ffMutilated™, exclusively available at
FontShop
 Typeface ffMutilated™
One of the joys in a type designer's life is when we discover one of our creations in the wild, in action so to speak. When some graphic designer uses our font and demonstrates how our type design can function in the context of graphic design.

The titles and production design of Cry Wolf is one of these cases. The typeface used here is called ffMutilated™ and is one of the first fonts I created way back in my first year in art school. It was released with FontShop in 1994 and sold since in the DirtyFaces bundle No. 4. Of course it is only simple logic that the longer a font has been commercially available the bigger its proliferation will be. So although the ffMutilated™ probably won't rank amongst my proudest moments as a type designer it is still very usable and I am happy every time it pops up somewhere.

So I bought the Cry Wolf soundtrack and the DVD purely for the cover but then had to discover that the movie is not half bad even if you are not a particular fan of the teen-slasher-mystery genre and the soundtrack totally kicks ass!
The fonts included in the ffMutilated™ bundle are the PlainCaps and the Fat. This specimens is a showing of these two weights. This is the original descriptive text for the ReadMe that went with the release of the ffMutilated™ in 1994.
The lettershapes are taken from little rubber stamps I found in the toy department of a supermarket. I printed them with Chinese ink on rough paper, digitized them and built a range of five weights out of them. The two weights included in this package are FF Mutilated™ Plain Caps and FF Mutilated™ Fat. Both are capitals-only fonts. The lower case keys of the Fat version give access to a rather plain and clean alphabet, identical to the caracterset FF Mutilated™ Plain Caps features under the caps. The lower case keys of the Plain Caps font provide the small caps and the capital keys of the Fat version features a set of extremely overweight, ink smothered capitals. So what you actually have to your disposal are three fonts that hide under the keys of two, which comes in handy when used in text in applications that allow you to change the case of selected text. With the FF Mutilated family you don't actually change the typeface's case, instead you toggle between degrees of mutilation.
The original stamps I used are still covered in dried up ink and live in an old Earl Grey box somewhere at the bottom of a drawer but I found this identical stamp set in Boston a few years later.
The four steps of digitizing the ffMutilated™:
1) Buy the rubber stamps 2) Make imprints 3) Vectorize (back in the day using Adobe Streamline) 4) Stick the outlines in a font (using RoboFog)
The original font had five styles of which FontShop licensed two. I know... looking at it here it kind of begs to be updated and integrated into three OpenType fonts. This wonderful book was designed by Susie Bikle of Studio Zipper in her student days. Another application of the typeface ffMutilated™, the cover design of Jan Burke's Irene franchise books:

  © 2001-2007 Hannes Famira, all rights reserved.