Choosing a good font for manga typesetting (Part 2) – Paid fonts

All right, welcome back! It’s been a while since I left off with Part 1, where I mentioned some things I usually look for when picking a font for typesetting manga with. I also took the chance to mention a few fonts I wouldn’t touch with a 20-foot barge pole, some of which might be okay for SFX fonts but all of which look terrible as dialog fonts.

Today we continue with some good dialog fonts – those for typesetters and comic book writers with deep pockets. Or not that deep, if you shop right. This is a good time for a post like this because Comicraft, “Purveyors of Unique Design and Fine Lettering” i.e. comic book fonts, will be holding their annual January 1st sale. All fonts on their site will cost only $20.15, as opposed to up to $129 for some of their priciest offerings.

Disclaimer: I’m a complete font amateur and self-taught typesetter and I’m writing this for fellow self-taught amateurs. So this isn’t meant to be professional advice at all. With that out of the way, which fonts do I personally like? Which ones would I use/have I used before in a manga? That’s what this post is here for. For Comicraft fonts, I’m partial to:

wildwordsWildwords – Some people steer clear of Wildwords these days because at some point in the early 2000s it seemed like every typesetter and their mother was using it. That doesn’t make it a bad font though. It looks good in nearly every kind of manga and in fact seems almost tailor-made for shounen manga. It fits into the fiddliest bubbles like a dream and looks good at nearly all sizes, so it’s a great ‘starter’ font for baby typesetters. Even its ubiquity is a good thing, because it means fans won’t get caught up looking at your pretty font, they’ll just move to the meat of the story. There’s a nice-looking lowercase version as well, though the ‘d’ looks a little squat IMO.

joe kubertJoe Kubert – One of my favorites. It has a clean, open feel that makes it good for both for dense, dark manga, where it stands out in a good way, and for manga with lots of white space, where it blends right in. It does look a bit formal though, so I wouldn’t use it for anything too jokey. Also it might be a little too ‘manly’ for a very girly shoujo manga. In such cases you can either use the slightly softer and rounder Adam Kubert or…

Jim Lee – A friendly, comical looking font that works best in small doses. Too much of it or too large a size and it becomes slightly hard to follow, though still legible. I like it a lot in light-hearted manga. If it’s manga with a lot of text I’ll use something else, otherwise I like either Jim Lee or a lowercase font for the lighter stuff.

los vampirosLos Vampiros – Another font you can’t really go wrong with, with the added bonus of being much less common than Wild Words. The letters may look a bit large, but they scale up and down nicely. The ‘R’ looks a little bulbous to me, but apart from that I like it.

Digital Delivery – It’s a bit too even and robotic to be used in speech bubbles, but I’ve made good use of it for narration bubbles, especially where the narrator is one of the characters in the manga so it feels like s/he’s just writing in a diary. If you use it, try not to make it too big.

Meanwhile – A font I’ve used once instead of Joe Kubert. When used at larger sizes it can bother me a bit because of the too-large Os and the squeezy look of the Es and… am I making any sense, btw? But at normal dialog font sizes like 14-18 it looks great.

Mild Mannered – ‘Meanwhile’ without all the flaws. A much better options Maybe it’s because of the name, but I think of comics when I look at it.

I wouldn’t use: Comicrazy – Only one step above Comic Sans MS. Yes, I went there. Dave Gibbons – It’s too big. Kiss and Tell – The shape of the ‘A’ and the ‘E’ and the ‘N’ and lots of other letters feel a little ‘off’. Good for people who like slightly quirky stuff, I guess, but I would find it distracting to read. Hush Hush – It’s just ugly. Yada Yada – Ugh-ly. Tim Sale – Also ugly, also dat S. etc, etc.

Apart from Comicraft the other paid font company most people know of is Blambot. They unleashed monstrosities like Anime Ace, ACME Secret Agent and Manga Temple on the world so it’s easy to curse their name, but they also have some great paid offerings as well. As a bonus these are cheaper than Comicraft’s all year round at an average of $20 each. They also have an annual 30% off sale, which is sadly over for this year. For Blambot paid fonts, I’d recommend…

font_lintmccreeLint McCree Intl BB – Probably my favorite of the Blambot fonts, since even though the letters have bulges in all the wrong places, they’re all like that, so the whole thing works together. Looks great both big and small. The letter U sticks out a bit though, since it’s a bit square compared to the rounded nature of the other letters. It would be better if D was a little smaller too. Also the little ‘dash’ under the exclamation mark gives it a childish look that would make it harder to use in more serious manga. Good dialog font for a lighthearted shounen or seinen series.

font_jackarmstrongJack Armstrong BB – A bit thick, but would look good in most kinds of manga as long as you don’t study it too closely. If you do study it, you might be bothered like I am by that triangular-looking ‘A’ or how low the lower half of the E is, same with K, and how P looks like D while R looks like a K with a boil on its head and the bottom of the U isn’t smooth enough, and on and on and on. Best to use this one in an action manga where people don’t linger over the pages.

font_antiheroAntiHero BB – Another quirky, less formal font you might use in place of Jim Lee. That ‘A’ bugs me a little bit, but it still looks really nice, particularly at smaller dialogue sizes.

font_comicgeekComicgeek BB – Again, that ‘A’. I don’t know what Blambot has against A, is it because their name starts with B? If you can overlook that it’s a decent font. I’d wait for a sale on this one TBH.

Hometown Hero BB – This time they added the letter S to their victims. But Hometown Hero has an endearing “this is a comic book!”-like feel to it that will be good for more generic stuff, like a run-of-the-mill shounen, of which there are many, many.

I don’t really like: Eurocomic BB – Nah. Hard to read and not that nice to look at. Might work for a comic strip or webcomic, but not for anything long. Inkslinger BB – Just look at it! MangaMaster BB – What’s ‘manga’ about those pointy bottoms and malformed Os? You can’t just throw the term ‘manga’ in front of everything. Smack Attack BB – Just wrong all over. Webletterer Pro BB – More crimes against the letter A, plus Webletterer has a free version that is only slightly uglier with no italics version. Pass.

Btw, it occurs to me that this post would be a lot more useful if I would post actual usage examples for each font. I’ll try and make it happen sometime over the holidays, maybe not for all of them but at least for some. Or I could try and create some examples, by picking a manga page and using all the fonts on the same page to make a comparison easier. I hope that’s not illegal… maybe there’s a public domain manga from the 40s or 50s out there. Anyway, I’ll look into it. Remind me if I forget.

Also while the best paid fonts usually look much better than the best free ones, you probably shouldn’t start out with those until you’ve learned basic typesetting 101 skills (refer to the link to Vorbis’ site in the previous post) and also have a better idea of the kind of manga/comic/webcomic you’ll be working on.

Okay, see you whenever I feel like putting out Part 3! In the meantime, if you know any good paid comic fonts I forgot to include (or maybe I didn’t forget because I secretly hate it), please share it below!

Choosing a good font for manga typesetting (Part 1)

I don’t read as much English manga now as I used to, but when I read one these days, I pay attention to the translation and I pay attention to the typesetting. I’m sure it’s natural for anyone with a hobby/specialty to take a close look at the work of others in the same line of work, so to speak, and you can learn a lot by studying how other people do something. But while you can find quite a number of step by step redrawing tutorials showing how something was redrawn, it’s far rarer to find an explanation of why a particular typesetter used a particular font for a particular manga. About the only one I know is Vorbis’ guide to typesetting, which is essential reading for any budding typesetter.

So anyway, that’s where I come in. The tips and tricks like centering, using text boxes, avoiding too many size changes etc. are well covered in other typesetting guides, so I won’t focus on those too much. Instead I want to go over the works I’ve done so far and explain why I chose the fonts I’ve been using. Once you become a veteran typesetter (not that I’m one or anything) you’ll use your own tastes and judgment to pick what fits you best, but I hope this will help newbies who are starting out and are feeling overwhelmed by the thousands of fonts out there.

Before I dive into what font I do use though, this is my very general guideline for picking fonts: It has to be legible, it has to be simple and it has to look good at the size I want to use it at. Some fonts are nice in smaller sizes, but not so impressive at larger sizes, e.g. CC Jim Lee, Lafayette.

Also I’m not an expert on font evaluation, so I don’t know a thing about kerning or spacing or what makes a good bold font or a bad one, but I look for well-shaped, sensible-looking letters, i.e. A should look like A, not a triangle, R should look like R, not B, etc. There are exceptions to this, which is why it’s a guideline, not a rule, but in general I like fonts that look relatively ‘normal.’

To round off today’s post, here are four popular fonts you won’t catch me using and why not.

anim_ace51. Anime Ace – The bane of my existence because so many typesetters use it and yet it’s so, so ugly. When I talked about A looking like A and R looking like R, it was Anime Ace I had first and foremost in mind. The letter shapes are off, the spacing is weird, it’s hard to read at anything above a size 14 and a mass of it just looks all black and ugly. There’s no art so nice that you can’t ruin it by adding some Anime Ace.

2. Comic Sans – I have toyed with the idea of using it at least once just to be ironic, but the shapes of the letters are just wrong in subtle ways and I don’t like the spaces between certain letter combinations so I’d have to manually correct them all the time. I’m not a bandwagon comic sans hater, but it really isn’t a very nice font at all.

digital_strip03. Digital Strip – It’s too square and boxy for me. I’ve used it in the past (not on this blog) and I’ve seen people using it both as a dialogue and as a narration front, but it’s just too abrupt and angular for my liking. I also don’t like that slight thickening at the bottom that makes the whole thing look like it’s leaning ever so slightly to the right. I think it would work best as a one-liner, e.g. for chapter titles, but not for anything heavier than that.

manga_temple04. Manga Temple – The only purpose I can imagine for this font is as a ‘horror’ font. The thick tops and thin bottoms of each letter make it look so distorted that it’s bound to scare a few people. It certainly scares me. And this is another font where the letters don’t look like what they’re supposed to. In the small sample on the right you can even see that the A is barely an A and the P almost looks like a D. All that distracts from immediate legibility. I wouldn’t use this as a dialogue font, no siree.

Other fonts I don’t really like but that are quite common include:

samaritan cc astro city fontAcme Secret Agent (it’s like the bastard child of Anime Ace and Manga Temple),
Samaritan, more commonly known as CC Astro City (I’ve used it as a narration font and like it there, but I keep seeing it as a dialogue font and I don’t care much for that, especially when it’s used without regard to the tone of the manga),
Zud Juice,
Mighty Zeo Caps (the lowercase version has its uses),
Crimefighter (I like it but it’s so huge it’s hard to use),
Webletterer (same as Crimefighter) and some others I can’t recall right now because I don’t use them.

Btw I should have mentioned earlier that all this applies only to ordinary dialogue fonts. For SFX fonts and other special uses, all bets are off. E.g. I can imagine making a character send an e-mail in Comic Sans or putting a signboard in Digital Strip, but as regular dialogue fonts they just suck. This post just reached 900 words so I’ll continue at another date.