About Designing Springfield

I'm a graphic designer - illustrator - cartoonist with a fondness for typography and a liking of the Simpsons. It seems only natural to put them together and have a little fun with the world of Springfield. It might also lead to paying work....

Friday, June 12, 2009

Moe's Tavern


Moe's is another of the long-time Springfield landmarks that never really had any kind of a logo; the establishing shot of the exterior shows a purple building with green-and-orange diamond-cut stained glass windows, and (again) plain red block letters spelling out the name, "MOE'S" over the door. The words "Moe's Tavern" appear in black lettering on the side wall.

I decided that Moe's sign should probably look like it hadn't been updated in a few decades; in the mid-1970s there was an 1890s revival (along with a '20s revival and a '50s one, almost simultaneously, as nostalgia is prone to do), with a lot of businesses adopting the late-Victorian-to-Edwardian letterforms and decorative devices. In my old neighborhood there was an entire mall decorated in that style, and some people may remember Farrell's, a chain of "gay '90s" ice cream parlors. In Southern California at least, the turn of the century design also included an Old West flavor (same time period, different culture), with "western" fonts popping up here and there.

I've opted to use one of those western fonts, in this case Ponderosa, but I've tortured it. Ponderosa is an astonishingly narrow font with gigantic serifs, so I scaled it horizontally to 300% of its original proportion for enhanced legibility. Then I rotated it 10° counterclockwise (or as I prefer to think of it, widdershins) and stacked layers of keylines on it and dropped it in front of a circular element.

Colors are derived from the interior of the bar; brown from the wood, green and orange from the windows, and yellow from the customers' skin tone.

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