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Human Types explores the interplay between humans and machines in typography and graphic design. Challenging generative AI and fleeting design trends, the series highlights the unique insights, expertise, and emotions of leading creatives, including Matthieu Salvaggio (Blaze Type), Matteo Bologna (muccaTypo), and Monotype’s Sina Otto. It emphasizes typography as a reflection of culture and identity, underscoring the essential humanity behind every typographic choice.
Type Trends 2025. The latest in type design, from the Monotype Studio. Download PDF report

Human Types: five takeaways for this brave new typographic world.

Humans are central to design.
Design is a verb; design is human. It addresses human needs, wants, and dreams. It’s the action of reframing, innovating, executing, and curating as we work to find what’s new, what fits, what excites us. AI is great (and getting better) at execution. But human creativity is the driver, humanity the guiding light.
AI-based design isn’t the future — it’s here and it’s now.
The question is no longer “if” or “when,” but “how” and “why.” If adopted thoughtfully, AI can act as our creative partner, working alongside us to add to our human creative capacities. Monotype’s experiments using AI, though early days, have produced amazing results. Expect more and expect it soon.
Typographic abundance makes new tools essential.
Today, we have more typography available to us than ever before. This makes finding the type we want difficult. Seasoned typographers can only remember a couple thousand fonts by eye. AI can learn them all — and can and will help non-type-obsessives find their very particular needle in a very large haystack.
Don’t just expect more fonts — expect to see more lettering, too.
AI is getting pretty great at lettering, creating beautiful letterform lockups. It will get better and better. Look for a future where expressive letters are called into being without the use of fonts.
Typography is becoming more personal.
Printed type provides a standard, static experience that is the same for everyone. This gives designers control, allowing them to craft a particular experience. There are advantages to knowing how your audience will encounter your work. But user needs can vary widely. AI provides us with the possibility of a more personalized digital future, with dynamic text that can respond to our individual preferences and needs, changing fonts, spacing, color, design, and even language to fit our circumstances. What impacts will we see in the worlds of design and culture as we shift to more individualized typographic experiences?
0 sats \ 1 reply \ @Scoresby 6h
Look for a future where expressive letters are called into being without the use of fonts.
This was a startling statement to me. If AI-produced works muddy the use of fonts -- to where every piece of text is it's own font -- I wonder how long alphabets will last?
If a font is a standard way of composing letters, maybe letters can be thought of as the standard way of expressing sounds. In that sense an alphabet is a font for sounds. Some people use Arabic font, some people use French font. (Ideograms like Kanji complicate this).
I'm not sure I can imagine what this world would be like or how humans would write in such a world, but I do take fonts for granted.
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102 sats \ 0 replies \ @itsTomekK 5h
But we could draw imagined new letters even before AI ;)
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