Reviewing Knewave: A Brushy, Carefree Script Font to Show Expressiveness
![Knewave cover](https://typogram.co/font-discovery/media/posts/41/cover.png)
Welcome to Typogram’s FontDiscovery newsletter, written by your resident font and design nerd, Hua. Want to learn more about font and design? Subscribe FontDiscovery to get weekly doses of learning and inspiration♪
In This Issue…
How to Use Knewave for Logo, Branding & More
- Fonts: Knewave, a brushy crafty companion for simpler
- Design idea: Primitive Figuration
- Color Inspiration: Arts and Crafts Movement
Font of the Week
Knewave on the Streets
Do streets and urban environments inspire you? If so, Knewave is an excellent place to start. Knewave is a brush letter font. brush lettering is deeply rooted in sign painting, which is the craft of hand painting signs on buildings or billboards to advertise products. This was one of the primary ways businesses market themselves before the advent of computer software.
Due to the rapid technological change, though it may seem the sign painting community had disappeared, it is still very much alive. Since technology made mass production much more effortless, sign painting now focuses on personality and uniqueness. Business owners wanted one-of-a-kind statements, and that’s what sign painting offered: unique creative campaigns that make a single business stand out.
Knewave is an excellent font that embodies the sign painting spirits. It is graphic and communicates artisanal, crafty liveliness. We could see this on an album cover, wall art inside cafes, or streetwear brands.
Font Details
- Two styles, regular and outline
- Fat brush strokes
- Swelled brush tips
How to use Knewave for logos?
Knewave is expressive and communicates a crafty and artisanal attitude because of the swelled brush strokes. These traits may work for a specific niche like music, apparel, food, or creative brands. It is pretty legible as a logo font, but you should still pay attention when used on a smaller scale.
How to use Knewave for marketing and branding?
A brushy font like this can look great in large size and against a photo. In addition, both styles can be great for swag and decals. However, since it is a very decorative handwriting font, we shouldn’t use it for body or longer description text. Instead, you can pair it with another more neutral font for body-size copy, like Nunito.
Design Idea of the Week
Figuration
Figuration is the simplification of the body and facial features. It reduces realistic human figures into abstract shapes. This tactic stemmed from African art and became vital to modern logos and illustrations. Saul Bass, known for his movie posters, used this technique for the poster and opening of Anatomy of a Murder.
Color Inspirations of the Week
Art and Craft
Are you ever tired of technology and think about simpler times? That’s what a group of artists did in Britain around the 1880s when they formed the Arts and Crafts movement. These artists were concerned about the effects of industrialization on traditional craft and turned to new ways of living and working, where they actively promoted the role of craftsmanship.
![img: one of the central figures of the Art and Craft movement is William Morris, who is well known for his wallpaper patterns; source: Wikipedia](https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/fb02229a-6849-45e5-a9b2-7eb6b492cb71_1074x694.png)
Creative Prompt
Can you create a visual for Twitter or Instagram using Knewave, primitive figuration technique, or the color palette we featured today?
Thank you
…for reading and hanging out here this week! Knewave is available here.