Open Fonts + i18n

While reviewing the submissions for the Open Font Library logo competition we came across many concepts that nicely tied into the OpenClipart aesthetic. That was great.

We also noticed a tenancy to use glyphs from other scripts which was great but this really limits the brand for those coming from other nationalities who’s alphabet didn’t make it into the 3 used in the logo.

The best way to deal with this? Make a derivative logo for all locales!

As an exercise I took one submission by Marty, cleaned up the aesthetic a little and had it translated in 23 languages :-).

Considering I know only English and dumb English (translated here), It’s a privilege to have brilliant translators as colleagues.

Tools:

Inkscape (design)

XML2PO (conversion from SVG into pofiles )

RSVG locale specific style tweaks+rendering),

UPDATE:

I’ve published the major part of the technique for creating these translatable graphics here.

9 Responses to “Open Fonts + i18n”

  1. Asgeir Says:

    Long time no see, and Great work Andy! In your examples, you have green character in front and then blue and orange “shading” behind. Would it make sense to switch the “shading” order around for right-to-left languages, so that starting from right orange is in front and green is behind?

  2. Máirín Says:

    oh my goodness, these are gorgeous! great work!!!

  3. Stefano Giunchi Says:

    They’re wonderful, but in the Italian version there’s an error: “cartteri” is “caratteri”
    :-)

  4. Riccardo Says:

    Passing by on planet.inkscape.org I saw a spelling error in the Italian version : It’s “caratteri” not “cartteri”.
    Good job anyway :)

  5. Pablo Rodríguez Says:

    I’m afraid that the Spanish translation is wrong (and I’m a native speaker).

    It is a common mistake to translate “font” with “fuente” in Spanish. But “font” in this context should be translated with “tipografía” or even “tipografía digital”. False friends, you know.

    If you want to read a longer explanation “font” comes from the Latin «funditus», but in Spanish that would be “fundido”. “Fuente” in Spanish comes from the Latin «fons» and it means both “fountain” and “source“ (it also means “serving dish”). Translating back “Biblioteca abierta de fuentes tipográficas” would give something like “Open Library of Typographic Sources”.

    In my opinion, the Spanish translation should read “Biblioteca abierta de tipografías digitales”.

    I hope it helps. Congratulations for your excellent work.

  6. Andy Fitzsimon Says:

    Thanks for the feedback Pablo, Riccardo & Stefano.

    I’m really glad that the translators for Spanish and Italian had logical errors rather than just typing “andy smells” in their respective languages ;-)
    Your changes should be there now .

  7. Marty Says:

    hi, nice to see you derivated my logo. in german the title could be
    “Offenes Schriftenarchiv”. you could use the letter abc as well or äbc or aßc.

  8. Pablo Rodríguez Says:

    Thanks for the improvements, Andy.

    If you allow me a further comment, the last word in the Spanish translation should read “digitales” and not “digitale” (which is wrong in Spanish). Yes, “digitales” is the Spanish form for “digital”, but in Spanish adjectives have a plural form that is different from the singular one (singular: “digital” and plural: “digitales”).

    I hope it helps,

    Pablo

  9. minikbarbie Says:

    oh my goodness, these are gorgeous! great work!!!

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