Somebody loves to use British english vernacular -- why use "bespoke" rather than the US equivalent, "custom"? According to the system dictionary bespoke is usually used in reference to goods and clothing such as tailors.
Somebody loves to use British english vernacular -- why use "bespoke" rather than the US equivalent, "custom"? According to the system dictionary bespoke is usually used in reference to goods and clothing such as tailors.
I think the AI style guide says "use 'bespoke' at least once per article if at all possible."
Somebody loves to use British english vernacular -- why use "bespoke" rather than the US equivalent, "custom"? According to the system dictionary bespoke is usually used in reference to goods and clothing such as tailors.
I'm surprised no one has mocked up what the Apple site would look like using the REAL San Francisco font--the bizarre, ransom-note font that debuted with the original Mac.
Comments
I think the AI style guide says "use 'bespoke' at least once per article if at all possible."
(Wink!)
I say bring back the original (1984) San Fransisco typefaces!
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Francisco_(1984_typeface)#/media/File:San_Francisco.png
Had not read your post before I posted.
Glad you put it up (started to say got it up...).
Great minds do apparently think (and post) alike.
@retrogusto: bravo for your mockup.