The Short and Simple Story of the Credit Crisis
With the delay we’ve experienced due to these darn outages, we’re a bit behind on a number of posts. One of them is The Crisis of Credit Visualized, a marvellous piece of motion graphics by Jonathan Jarvis. Many of you may already have seen it, but it’s just too good to run the risk somebody missing out on this.
Jonathan Jarvis is a designer based in Los Angeles who is currently practicing in the Graduate Media Design Program at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, California. The goal of giving form to a complex situation like the credit crisis is to quickly supply the essence of the situation to those unfamiliar and uninitiated. This project was completed as part of his thesis work exploring the use of new media to make sense of a increasingly complex world.
And make sense it does. Jason managed to make a stylish and well designed animation that is informative and educational. As one commenter on Vimeo remarks:
It’s like the 50s instructional video for a new generation.
Read also about it on the excellent Motionographer. And if you feel like going through the almost 250 comments and growing – good luck.
One more thing before we let you enjoy the video. As usual we try to identify the typefaces used – we can’t help it, it’s a reflex. The square slab serif is… well… Square Slab Serif 711. You may know it under another name, but let’s say I’d rather jump in a septic tank than link to The Once Great Type Foundry Which Is Now Owned By A Guy Who’d Rather Bully Other (Preferably Smaller) Type Foundries Than Treat His Type Designers Right. And the DIN-like soft tech face is none other than Nick Cooke’s delightful Chevin.
The Crisis of Credit Visualized from Jonathan Jarvis on Vimeo.
The FontFeed is a daily dispatch of recommended fonts, typography techniques, and inspirational examples of digital type at work in the real world. Eat up.
Related Posts
- Post TypeCon2009 – SEED Awards Videos
- Hosted by AIGA Atlanta, SEED is the premiere design competition in the Southeast, recognising the top creative work in the…Read more
- FF Milo Becomes a Super Family
- With the recent addition of FF Milo Serif Mike Abbink’s popular FF Milo becomes an extensive, versatile super family.…Read more
- New FontFonts: The Creation of FF Unit Slab
- FF Unit Slab is the most recent of Erik Spiekermann type families to join the ranks of tha sans/serif type…Read more
- The Typography of Dexter, Serial Cover Star
- Red Group created a slew of print advertisements for the hit television series “Dexter”, made to look like mock covers…Read more
- Graphic Design – The Forgotten Web Standard Slides In 3 Minutes
- This sped up footage of Mike Kus designing his slides for his FOWD London 2009 presentation reveals the creative process…Read more

The latest in the world of typography, lettering, and type design.
Whether they’re newly released, stalwart classics, or hidden gems, these typefaces deserve special mention.
Improve your typography skills with these basic tips and advanced tutorials.
Specimens are nice, but we love to catch a typeface in the wild, where it can truly show how it performs in the real world.





1 Comment:
GREAT, simplified explanation!!
–practically the exact same thing my in-laws have been saying for the past 10 years…
how did they know what was happening and nobody else did?
–glad i had a nagging (but loving) in-law to help ‘knock sense’ at my end =)
Post a comment: