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This must be an extreme case:
http://www.ms-studio.com/typecasting.html
Example (when talking bout L.A. Confidential):
"A newspaper dated 1953 has headlines set in Helvetica Black (1959) and
Univers (1957) - typefaces which weren't commonly available in the U.S.
until the sixties."
--
- Warp
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On 14 Dec 2007 05:31:14 -0500, Warp <war### [at] tagpovrayorg> wrote:
> This must be an extreme case:
It must indeed!
A bad case of Train Spotter's lurgie
Regards
Stephen
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Warp wrote:
> Example (when talking bout L.A. Confidential):
>
> "A newspaper dated 1953 has headlines set in Helvetica Black (1959) and
> Univers (1957) - typefaces which weren't commonly available in the U.S.
> until the sixties."
My God... That's *advanced*!
How the hell can you tell which typeface it is??
--
http://blog.orphi.me.uk/
http://www.zazzle.com/MathematicalOrchid*
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From: Bill Pragnell
Subject: Re: How far can you go spotting goofs in movies?
Date: 14 Dec 2007 06:34:44
Message: <47626a54$1@news.povray.org>
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Invisible wrote:
> Warp wrote:
>
>> Example (when talking bout L.A. Confidential):
>>
>> "A newspaper dated 1953 has headlines set in Helvetica Black (1959) and
>> Univers (1957) - typefaces which weren't commonly available in the U.S.
>> until the sixties."
>
> My God... That's *advanced*!
>
> How the hell can you tell which typeface it is??
I guess if that's your area of expertise...
I know a guy who's really good at engineering history - tools,
instruments and so forth. He'll watch a movie like Titanic and say "that
make of binoculars weren't in maritime use until 1919", or Saving
Private Ryan and say "that Panzer's markings are from the 45th battle
group, which weren't deployed in Northern France at all" or something.
I'm making up these examples, obviously! :-)
No different from some of the geekery on display here... ;-)
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Bill Pragnell wrote:
> Invisible wrote:
>> Warp wrote:
>>
>>> Example (when talking bout L.A. Confidential):
>>>
>>> "A newspaper dated 1953 has headlines set in Helvetica Black (1959) and
>>> Univers (1957) - typefaces which weren't commonly available in the U.S.
>>> until the sixties."
>>
>> My God... That's *advanced*!
>>
>> How the hell can you tell which typeface it is??
>
> I guess if that's your area of expertise...
>
> I know a guy who's really good at engineering history - tools,
> instruments and so forth. He'll watch a movie like Titanic and say "that
> make of binoculars weren't in maritime use until 1919", or Saving
> Private Ryan and say "that Panzer's markings are from the 45th battle
> group, which weren't deployed in Northern France at all" or something.
> I'm making up these examples, obviously! :-)
>
> No different from some of the geekery on display here... ;-)
But... typefaces are *tiny*. How can you even read the text on the
screen, never mind tell what face it is?
--
http://blog.orphi.me.uk/
http://www.zazzle.com/MathematicalOrchid*
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From: Bill Pragnell
Subject: Re: How far can you go spotting goofs in movies?
Date: 14 Dec 2007 06:48:04
Message: <47626d74$1@news.povray.org>
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Invisible wrote:
> Bill Pragnell wrote:
>> Invisible wrote:
>>> Warp wrote:
>>>
>>>> Example (when talking bout L.A. Confidential):
>>>>
>>>> "A newspaper dated 1953 has headlines set in Helvetica Black (1959) and
>>>> Univers (1957) - typefaces which weren't commonly available in the U.S.
>>>> until the sixties."
>>>
>>> My God... That's *advanced*!
>>>
>>> How the hell can you tell which typeface it is??
>>
>> I guess if that's your area of expertise...
>>
>> I know a guy who's really good at engineering history - tools,
>> instruments and so forth. He'll watch a movie like Titanic and say
>> "that make of binoculars weren't in maritime use until 1919", or
>> Saving Private Ryan and say "that Panzer's markings are from the 45th
>> battle group, which weren't deployed in Northern France at all" or
>> something. I'm making up these examples, obviously! :-)
>>
>> No different from some of the geekery on display here... ;-)
>
> But... typefaces are *tiny*. How can you even read the text on the
> screen, never mind tell what face it is?
Headlines, or close-ups if the plot demands it, I'm guessing. Either
that or he managed to get on set and look at their props.
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From: Warp
Subject: Re: How far can you go spotting goofs in movies?
Date: 14 Dec 2007 08:23:08
Message: <476283bc@news.povray.org>
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Bill Pragnell <bil### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
> No different from some of the geekery on display here... ;-)
Yeah. "The reflection on that sphere is physically incorrect." Actual case.
--
- Warp
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Bill Pragnell <bil### [at] hotmailcom> wrote:
> I know a guy who's really good at engineering history - tools,
> instruments and so forth. He'll watch a movie like Titanic and say "that
> make of binoculars weren't in maritime use until 1919", or Saving
> Private Ryan and say "that Panzer's markings are from the 45th battle
> group, which weren't deployed in Northern France at all" or something.
> ...
I know a clone of this guy. Furthermore, he insists on giving out this
"valuable" information in the theater WHILE everyone is trying to watch the
movie. (Was Thorazine in the Milk Duds too extreme a response?)
Best Regards,
Mike C.
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From: Tim Attwood
Subject: Re: How far can you go spotting goofs in movies?
Date: 14 Dec 2007 18:09:58
Message: <47630d46$1@news.povray.org>
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> Yeah. "The reflection on that sphere is physically incorrect." Actual
> case.
A lot of the car ads on TV lack proper reflections off of them. =)
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From: John VanSickle
Subject: Re: How far can you go spotting goofs in movies?
Date: 14 Dec 2007 18:14:21
Message: <47630e4d$1@news.povray.org>
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Invisible wrote:
> Warp wrote:
>
>> Example (when talking bout L.A. Confidential):
>>
>> "A newspaper dated 1953 has headlines set in Helvetica Black (1959) and
>> Univers (1957) - typefaces which weren't commonly available in the U.S.
>> until the sixties."
>
> My God... That's *advanced*!
>
> How the hell can you tell which typeface it is??
People who work with fonts all the time can spot a font very quickly.
The Comic font is commonly used in ads and is easy to spot. Tahoma is
common in video work (apparently it is the default font in some editing
app).
Regards,
John
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