Makingfaces

About this project

Two years ago i shot footage (in HD video) for a documentary on possibly the only person who designed and fabricated fonts in both digital and metal formats. This person, Jim Rimmer, has died this year and this delayed project is in need of finishing. My commitments to starting a book arts center and making it work in one of the poorest cities in America has taken more of my time and resources than ever imagined.

With additional funds I can secure finishing assistance and be able to produce the film and schedule screenings as well as produce a DVD that will be made available via documentary and educational channels.

The trailer for the film was made with an optimistic target release of Spring 2009. The trailer can be seen on youtube here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch...

This project has a dual goal of documenting the almost-lost skill of creating metal fonts and of capturing the personality and work process specifically of practitioner the late Canadian graphic artist Jim Rimmer (1931-2010). P22 type foundry commissioned Mr. Rimmer to create a new type design (Stern) that became the first-ever simultaneous release of a digital font and, hand-set metal font in 2008. The skills needed to create a metal font are known by very few people and Mr. Rimmer was generous to a fault when it came to sharing his knowledge. Considering that Jim Rimmer was possibly the only individual who designed and cast typefaces in metal as well as in digital format, this opportunity to document the processes of the historic with the contemporary would not present itself again.

This documentary was begun with a minimal budget but with expectations of a final edited film in Hi-Def digital video that would be accessible and useful for typography professionals and graphic arts schools and to a more general audience interested in motivation and obsession of a fascinating, esoteric and culturally omnipresent field of work. The final film on DVD is planned to be screened at festivals, graphic arts conferences and made available to schools, other interested organizations, individuals and broadcast outlets.

The home stretch in finishing this film is primarily making the time and securing additional assistance in tightening up some detail. Then it will be ready for the world. The lack of firm obligations to backers or release dates made this a hazy obligation. Every kickstarter backer for this project will now be my motivation to have the obligation to get this project finished. Many levels of pledge rewards will provide a pre order opportunity

Thank you
Richard Kegler


Project location: Buffalo, NY

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Funding Successful

This project successfully raised its funding goal on June 16.

Pledge $5 or more

Much gratitude

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Pledge $20 or more

An unreleased font by Jim Rimmer: Loxley, that will be finished soon and as per Jim's wishes, proceeds will go towards finishing this film (Kickstarter seemed the best way to make this happen) see sample PDF http://p22.com/RTF/RimmerLoxleyFont.pdf

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Pledge $35 or more

The Loxley font, PLUS a copy of the Stern font specimen booklet seen here http://www.p22.com/RTF/sternmerch.html

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Pledge $50 or more

The Loxley font, Stern Booklet PLUS a finished copy of the final film on DVD

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Pledge $100 or more

$100- The Loxley font, Stern Booklet, Making Faces DVD PLUS a limited edition letterpress memorial piece dedicated to Jim Rimmer

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Pledge $300 or more

Institutional/Educational Screening copy of DVD with public performance rights plus all of the above

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Pledge $500 or more

Your name listed in credits (PLUS The Loxley font, Stern Booklet, Making Faces DVD PLUS a limited edition letterpress memorial piece dedicated to Jim Rimmer)

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Project By

Irishprinter

Richard Kegler

Richard Kegler is the founder and lead designer at P22 type foundry. Before his involvement in type design, Mr. Kegler was a bookbinder, designer, postgraduate, artist seeking a respectable self-sustaining life as a
hand-craftsman. The years of historical typographic research at P22 has influenced a profound interest in using hand techniques alongside digital capabilities. Mr. Kegler has recently started a non-profit Book Arts Center in Buffalo NY and has returned to an active involvement in hand setting and printing metal and wood type as a concurrent career with digital font research at P22.