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Michael Harvey’s aptly-named Mentor™ design is a superb family of serif and sans serif
typefaces that pays tribute to the influence of three great designers. “There
are traces of Eric Gill and Reynolds Stone in the roman designs,” says Harvey,
“and just a hint of Hermann Zapf in the sans serif faces.”
The story of Mentor begins in the early 1960s, when Harvey drew serif and sans
serif alphabets to use for illustrations in his book, Lettering Design: Form &
Skill in the Design & Use of Letters. The illustrations were intended to be typical
twentieth-century letterforms, without affectations or idiosyncratic details.
Harvey took his inspiration from the work of Gill and Stone, designers he
greatly admired.
Twenty years later, he considered turning these alphabets into a typeface. “I
scanned and digitised them,” recalls Harvey, “but the results looked too prim,
the serifs were too fine; the whole thing lacked character.” The results were
filed on his hard drive.
This might have been the end of it, but after some time had passed, Harvey was
commissioned to design a book jacket. The lettering he created started him
thinking about the typeface idea once more. “The lettering for the jacket was
also a classic roman design, but it had more appeal, more life, than the
earlier renderings,” says Harvey. “This was when I realised that, as well as
Gill and Stone, there was something of Harvey in the characters too.” Re-inspired,
he revised the original digitised characters until they had the
quality of those he drew for the book jacket.
Harvey looked closely at Reynolds Stone’s distinctive italic script when he
drew the italic. While by no means a copy, the final design shares the
personality and proportion of the stone carver’s inscriptual letters.
Harvey wanted to create matching sans fonts to complement the roman, but again
he found his earlier efforts to be inadequate. “They were too
nineteenth-century-cum-Helvetica in design,” says Harvey. The book jacket project provided
an answer once more: sans serif letters based on humanistic proportions, like
Gill’s sans, with gently flared stems reminiscent of Hermann Zapf’s Optima® design.
Finally, Harvey had the makings of a comprehensive type family: a
twentieth-century English interpretation of the classic roman letter. Concentrated work
on the Mentor family began in 1999, shortly before Harvey joined forces with
Andy Benedek to found Fine Fonts. Five years later, the Mentor family was
completed. Harvey designed the letters while Benedek fine-tuned their shapes,
added kerning, and produced the final digital fonts.
The Mentor and Mentor Sans typeface families each have four weights: light, regular, bold and black,
with a suite of complementary cursive italics. Small caps and old style figures
also accompany the designs, available in the OpenType® fonts only.
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