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When A Font Follows You

The power of repeated images, or letters, following you in your daily life

an illustration of two ghosts hiding behind the letter H and A
the Hobo font shown on the side of a service truck
Old cigarette poster
@LubalinCenter on Twitter
Hobo Sans font cover
Adobe Fonts
Hobo font mosaic
Fonts in Use

1. It’s fun and silly 🤪

Its zany-looking letters give levity to all sorts of content. It’s a way to show “hey, I like having fun, and this world is a dark place, so don’t take me too seriously!”

2. It’s accessible

All cheesiness aside, it’s bold, the shapes of its letters are easily distinguishable from one another, and it’s easy to read. It’s also available through various type foundries including Adobe, so anyone with a Creative Cloud license can go buck wild.

3. Bon Iver

Bon Iver on Twitter

4. The Baader-Meinhof effect

After noticing something for the first time, there is a tendency to notice it more often, leading to an illusion of an increased frequency. Am I seeing it around more because it is becoming popular? Or am I seeing it more because I can’t help but notice it more? 🤯. Which segues to the last reason.

5. Familiarity

Ok, here’s where I think the top answer is. It’s been around for 100+ years and has been used across countless pieces of visual media. It’s familiar with people, the same way it was for me.

That 70s Show Opening Titles (Fox)
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (20th Century Fox)
The Dukes of Hazzard (Warner Bros)
Flyer for a hip-hop concert in August 1981, designed by Lemoin Thompson aka Buddy Esquire.

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