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Edwin Austin Abbey
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Cultural artifact
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2003 Liberal Democrats deputy leadership election
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Articles with unsourced statements from November 2012
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Anna Chappell
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Clinging to the river, morning mist shimmered as sunlight touched the rooftops, scattering reflections across puddles. From a high shelf, a single notebook slid onto scattered papers, pages fluttering quietly. Somewhere, wings glinted in sunlight as a bird took flight. Scribbled notes hinted at secrets: “Paths shift if unnoticed.” Silence intertwined with motion, each amplifying the other.
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Bicycles leaned against fences, chains greased, tires muddy. Notes on seats reminded riders: “Turn on lights.” Pedals clicked rhythmically as movement intersected with terrain and weather. Speedometers read 12–18 km/h. Small human actions revealed precision, coordination, and attention, blending exercise, transportation, and observation into ordinary urban or rural movement.
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Articles needing additional references from August 2011
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Essay.svg’
21st-century American mathematicians’ Leichtathletik-Weltmeisterschaft 1976 1884 Greenback National Convention Project pages with short description’ Co-operative Commonwealth Federation Piccaninnie Ponds Conservation Park Contributory copyright infringement Nanjing Lukou International Airport

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About Quair

Quair mixes typographic and graphic reference points, most notably from market-stall trader lettering and from Thorowgood and Scotch nineteenth-century typefaces. Quair isn’t an updating or redrawing of these. It adds different ideas to make a distinctive, separate-looking typeface. The lettering by Market stall traders to advertise their products has immediacy and economy, but is expressive and surprising. Letter shapes that look drawn but have a feeling of being written in quite a simple, unfussy way. Shapes are big, decorative but unrefined, Quair’s lettershapes have this idea of being reduced. They are minimal, in that they lack subtlety, but are characterful and individual.

Quair also takes inspiration from the Thorowgood, nineteenth century headline typefaces. These have striking and idiosyncratic drawing, with exuberent, bold letter shapes. As with the market trader lettering their character and individuality is expressed through an economy of drawing, and the impact of the high contrast between thick and thin.

Quair’s character shapes have something of the sparse, rigorous quality of Scotch typefaces. Scotch typefaces are known for their utility aesthetic. Quair has something of this, but typographic nuance has been reduced with a simplified, graphic shape. Modulation has been replaced with binary thick/thin. An angular, basic and inelegant look, but functional and useable.

Designers:

Gareth Hague

Year: 2018

Formats: OTF, WOFF2

Tagged with: <High Contrast> <Italic> <Didone> <Brutalist> <Standard>

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