Tuesday, 6 October 2009

Font ideas

This is the font we have chosen to use for our film title. We chose to use this font as it is different and robotic. It fits in with our futuristic feel well and has a slightly weird quality to it. We like the way that there are no round edges, they all look as if they have been cut. It makes the font look sharp and defines the word. It makes it look more eyecatching and intreguing. We also like the way the 'O' is not joined up. The other letters are joined up (the 'I' has two seperate parts but they are both complete). The 'O' seems to be broken, and looks like it is not meant to be this way. We like this as it represents that the other clones are content with the way things are, but one clone is different and in a way is broken mentally. This links to why the clone started the whole situation, and is why we are using this font for our opening sequence.

We also thought that this font worked. We liked the way in which there are many sections to each letter, representing the many clones around and the different types of clones. We thought that this one also showed a bit of a futuristic feel to it, but thought it was not a font that would necesserily be in a thriller film, and thought the other font had better relations to our film than this one.

We liked this font also, only because of the 'T'. We liked the way in which it was split into two, as it represented cloning perfectly. It represents the way in which one thing is split into two, etc. However, we realised that we would only want this font for our title, 'Omni', and this word does not have the letter 'T' in it. We also agreed that the font we have chosen again, has more relations to our film than this one.

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