In the 1980s and 1990s, type became messy. Words were being
made to be more expressive and show the real raw feeling behind them. Concert
posters especially looked like someone had scratched the words out of the
paper. It was a time when Nirvana and such bands came to the forefront with
grunge rock, a chaotic and raw music, which the typography reflected very well.
This was a time where Cd copies were being made, and zines were being passed
around.
For zines to be made, someone has to design the covers and
pages. David Carson, who is the father of Grunge, designed the magazine Ray
Gun. He did not have any education in the arts or in design, he graduated with
a degree in Sociology, but his style was well made for the exact movement. His
design sought to be expressive and very very raw. When I look at his designs, I
always want to go in his direction, because they’re so raw and enticing and
they draw you in and you feel a wave of emotion going through you.
His two main rules were;
the rules don’t have to be known for you to break them
to never mistake legibility for communication.
This second rule is a strong point of his. When seeing the
words he puts in his posters, you get a gut feeling of what the word means, and
you usually see enough of the word to know and feel what he is saying. He is
known for his magazine covers of Ray
Gun, which kick started Grunge design. He once changed the font of an article
to Dingbat because he disliked the article.
http://www.designishistory.com/1980/david-carson/
http://www.theawl.com/2012/08/grunge-typography
http://www.ted.com/talks/david_carson_on_design?language=en