Scene® font family
Designed by Sebastian Lester in 2002
Clean. Calm. Highly legible. This is the design brief Sebastian Lester set for himself when he began to create the Scene typeface family.
Knowing that, you'd never guess that Lester's first commercial fonts were alternative" display designs influenced by electronic gaming and house music. Lester began his career after graduating with honors from Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London. He spent several years designing for the music and games industries and dabbling in 3D animation. Then, in 2000, he joined Monotype Imaging, where he creates fonts for both on-screen and print uses. "I've always had a deep interest in type and typography," says Lester, "but when I began creating text typefaces for Monotype Imaging, I gained new insight into the subtleties of letterform design."
Work on Scene began after Lester had developed several corporate identity fonts for Monotype Imaging. He wanted to provide graphic designers and creative directors with a suite of fonts that would serve as a strong foundation for identity projects. He also wanted to incorporate what he'd learned about achieving best on-screen and print legibility. Much of the Scene family's clarity lies in an x-height that sits comfortably between that of Helvetica and Verdana. Full-bodied counters, long ascenders and descenders, and exceptionally well-drawn letters also play their parts. Lester took special care with letter spacing and kerning to ensure optimal typographic color at any size.
Scene is the result of two years of after-hours and weekend work. "It started off as a part-time project," says Lester, "but ended up as virtually a second full-time job." The completed family is six weights with complementary italic designs. Also included is a set of "semi-sans" characters that introduce more expressive word rhythms into headlines and blocks of copy. In addition, aligning and old style numerals were drawn for all six weights.
"I'm very pleased with this font family," beams Lester. "I believe I've created a strong yet subtle communication tool that has much to offer designers working in corporate identity and other areas of design." We wholeheartedly agree."
Knowing that, you'd never guess that Lester's first commercial fonts were alternative" display designs influenced by electronic gaming and house music. Lester began his career after graduating with honors from Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London. He spent several years designing for the music and games industries and dabbling in 3D animation. Then, in 2000, he joined Monotype Imaging, where he creates fonts for both on-screen and print uses. "I've always had a deep interest in type and typography," says Lester, "but when I began creating text typefaces for Monotype Imaging, I gained new insight into the subtleties of letterform design."
Work on Scene began after Lester had developed several corporate identity fonts for Monotype Imaging. He wanted to provide graphic designers and creative directors with a suite of fonts that would serve as a strong foundation for identity projects. He also wanted to incorporate what he'd learned about achieving best on-screen and print legibility. Much of the Scene family's clarity lies in an x-height that sits comfortably between that of Helvetica and Verdana. Full-bodied counters, long ascenders and descenders, and exceptionally well-drawn letters also play their parts. Lester took special care with letter spacing and kerning to ensure optimal typographic color at any size.
Scene is the result of two years of after-hours and weekend work. "It started off as a part-time project," says Lester, "but ended up as virtually a second full-time job." The completed family is six weights with complementary italic designs. Also included is a set of "semi-sans" characters that introduce more expressive word rhythms into headlines and blocks of copy. In addition, aligning and old style numerals were drawn for all six weights.
"I'm very pleased with this font family," beams Lester. "I believe I've created a strong yet subtle communication tool that has much to offer designers working in corporate identity and other areas of design." We wholeheartedly agree."
Scene Ultra Black Italic
Desktop fonts are designed to
be installed on a computer for
use with applications.
Licensed per user.
Annual web fonts are licensed for a set number of page views.
Annual web fonts are licensed
for a set number of page views.
Application licensing allows fonts to be embedded in your software applications. The license may be based on the number of titles or the number of installations.
Electronic Document Fonts can be
embedded in an eBook, eMagazine or
eNewspaper. Fonts are licensed
annually per issue.
Server fonts can be installed on
a server and e.g. used by automated
processes to create items.
A license is per server core CPU per year.
A Digital Ads license allows you to embed web fonts in digital ads, such as ads created in HTML5. These license is based on the number of ad impressions.
Scene
Select technical format and
language support of the font.
language support of the font.
Technical details
Digital data from:
OpenType outline flavour:
CFF - PostScript-Outlines
Technical font names:
File name: SceneStd-UltraBlackIt.otf
Windows menu name: Scene Std Ultra Black
PostScript name: , SceneStd-UltraBlackIt
PostScript full name: , SceneStd-UltraBlackIt
Windows menu name: Scene Std Ultra Black
PostScript name: , SceneStd-UltraBlackIt
PostScript full name: , SceneStd-UltraBlackIt
Catalog number:
16786280
Characters:
363