The type specimen poster was a lesson on how type can be arranged in a style that creates interest to the viewer as something more than just another set of characters on the page. The posters I did emphasizes the use of intentional space on the page and of a limited color palette to create a product printed with a Risograph printer that holds more interest than a “normal” text-based poster. Additionally, the poster was meant to highlight the display font that I created. I chose layouts that highlighted single characters, examples of the text in a phrase/paragraph, as a word, and provided the entire specimen sheet for the font. The final posters that I printed with the Risograph machine utilized perspective/scale and opacity to create a visual hierarchy to emphasize the characters that made up the poster. Three of the posters were printed with flat-color Risograph ink, but the fourth was printed with gold-tinted ink on black paper.