GROOVY PSYCHEDELIC ALPHABET STOP: BEFORE YOU BUY... This is a Vector alphabet for cutting, pasting, and arranging. It is not an .otf or .ttf font that you can install and type with. Super swirly and groovy, this original psychedelic alphabet straddles the late '60s and early '70s in its general style. There are two versions, one with pastel colored hues to pop nicely from a dark background, and another with more saturated and deeper hues from the rainbow spectrum, for best contrast against light backgrounds. This new alphabet design is in the grand tradition of classic psychedelia, but has a slightly more eye-friendly and legible take than many of the classics, for more at-a-glance readability without losing any of the essential 'vibe.' For maximum groove and flow, use the Envelope Distort function in Adobe Illustrator. • Important Note: This is custom vector art, not an installable font. • Saved in .eps format, compatible with AI 10 and up. • Drag and drop the .eps files onto PhotoShop application icon to open in PhotoShop WORKING WITH THIS ALPHABET This is a set of vector letters that can be pasted together to create a custom headline for your graphic piece. In a matter of just a few minutes, you can copy and paste the letters to spell out a customized headline or product name, apply beautiful curves and contours if desired (using Adobe Illustrator's Object Envelope Distort commands), and presto, you have a lovely, unique, and custom-lettered branding system or headline. And yes, it goes more quickly than you might think. TIPS FOR GETTING A PERFECT RESULT 1) Don't forget the kerning! This is often the difference between a good lettering design and a great one. After you've positioned the lettering on a straight baseline, give it careful look. Squint at it. Look at it from across the room if it helps. Close up the big wide gaps like you might see between an 'L' and an 'A'. Open it up a bit when dense letters want to dovetail too tightly together. Bottom line: Don't use math or rulers to kern the letters, use your eyes. If it looks too tight or too loose, then it is. 2) If you've positioned individual vector letters before, you probably know that letters with rounded tops or bottoms need to extend a little bit below the baseline and above the cap height line. Example: a rounded capital letter 'O' extends slightly beyond the lines at both the top and bottom, and a rounded capital letter 'U' extends below the line at the bottom only. This extra height (most prominently on bold lettering) counteracts the optical illusion of rounded letters naturally appearing smaller than the rest. 3) Try curving your words, rotate them around an arc, bend and warp them for great results. Adobe Illustrator's Object Envelope Distort is your friend. 4) The colors are editable of course, although in some cases, it may prove to be overly complicated to edit some of the multiple gradient swatches used for creating the 3-d style drop shadows and faux-metallic shine gradients. Experiment, and see what works. ABOUT THE DESIGNER Mott Jordan is a veteran typography designer and confirmed lettering fanatic. He has two ITC designs to his credit (now administered by Monotype, Inc.), ITC Hornpype™, and ITC Verkehr™, as well as a large number of limited-release freebies floating around the web, dating back to the late 1990s. Jordan is also an artist, illustrator, animator, 3D designer, and photographer.