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Design for Dyslexie Font

Design
early 21st century (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The Dyslexie font was created by graphic designer Christian Boer (b. 1981) who himself has dyslexia and created the font in order to improve his own reading. Boer graduated from the Utrecht Art Academy in 2008 and developed the typeface as his final thesis project.

Boer identified that complex fonts are more difficult for dyslexic people to recognise and so Dyslexie needed to be a simple font, with each letter having unique visual traits. For example, the letters 'u' and 'n' would need to be significantly different in form, to allow for them to be distinguishable even if they were reversed or flipped – a common problem encountered by Dyslexic readers.






Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleDesign for Dyslexie Font (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Brief description
Christian Boer; sheet of Dyslexie Font Alphabet, early 21st century
Physical description
Ink printed on paper
Dimensions
  • Height: 297mm
  • Width: 210mm
Style
Production typeDesign
Credit line
Given by Christian Boer
Object history
The Dyslexie font was created by graphic designer Christian Boer (b.1981) who has dyslexia and created the font to improve his own reading. Boer graduated from the Utrecht Art Academy in 2008 and developed the typeface as his final thesis project.

In 2008, Boer first considered the idea of a coloured letter layout to enable people with dyslexia to read more easily, and learnt about rotating, reversing letters and word skipping (all of which are common problems whilst reading for people with dyslexia). As a result of this research, he came to the conclusion that people with dyslexia have problems recognising letter forms and objects in 2D that do not occur if they are represented as 3D objects. Starting with this premise, all letters are approached as 3D objects and then transformed to 2D letters. This makes every letter totally unique which avoids confusion between letters. Another feature is that the capital letters are bolder, in order to help the reader to identity the beginning of each sentence. The font’s primary concern is to maximise efficiency in reading comprehension rather than to create letter forms that are aesthetically pleasing.

Boer began selling the typeface in 2009 and clients now include Pixar, Nintendo, Shell, and Google who offer the font to employees. The regular version of the font remains free to individual users. Boer has won awards for his work on the typeface including the Smart Future Minds Aware 2011 in Amsterdam and nominations for the Fast Company Innovation by Design Awards 2012 and INDEX Design to Improve Life awards (2013) of Copenhagen.
Summary
The Dyslexie font was created by graphic designer Christian Boer (b. 1981) who himself has dyslexia and created the font in order to improve his own reading. Boer graduated from the Utrecht Art Academy in 2008 and developed the typeface as his final thesis project.

Boer identified that complex fonts are more difficult for dyslexic people to recognise and so Dyslexie needed to be a simple font, with each letter having unique visual traits. For example, the letters 'u' and 'n' would need to be significantly different in form, to allow for them to be distinguishable even if they were reversed or flipped – a common problem encountered by Dyslexic readers.




Collection
Accession number
E.759-2017

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Record createdNovember 28, 2017
Record URL
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