The Basement at London's Science Museum

新闻|Fonts in Use|Stephen Coles 2012-01-07 00:34:16

As many visitors are pre-readers, photographic images are utilized to aid readability.

Norman Hathaway designed the identity and signage program for the children's wing of London's Science Museum, informally known as The Basement. The wayfinding is built with asymmetric porcelain enamel signs with friendly black and white photos andSassoon. Hathaway says the typeface choice came naturally:

Rosemary Sassoon is the only person I know of who has done extensive readabilty testing with children. Her resulting typeface features details that help dyslexic kids differentiate between characters. Aside from all that, I think it's an attractive face. I like that Sassoon doesn't consider herself a designer, but a researcher. Perhaps that mindset made for the innovative end result.

Club Type's "Starter Pack" of Sassoon fonts for reading and handwriting exercises.

Since 1987, Adrian Williams has produced and licensed Sassoon's fonts through his Club Type foundry. They range from the original Primary face to upright, dotted, and joined handwriting variations commonly used in US and UK schools.

For more fonts inspired by school handwriting, see the School Scripts FontList curated by Florian Hardwig for FontShop.

MUR-Design

MUR-Design

Club Type

Club Type