Martin Jackson: The Importance of Ink
World-renowned graphic designer and calligrapher Martin Jackson shares his thoughts on why ink and the art of writing are stillΒ ...
Senior Executive Vice President of Strategic Finance & Operations, Select Medical Holdings
Search every verified Martin Jackson interview, podcast appearance, and on-the-record quote β each transcript cross-checked by AI and human review to confirm speaker identity. Martin Jackson, a graphic designer and calligrapher, spoke at a Creative Mornings event in 2015 about the importance of ink and handwriting. He described himself as a "craft person" who begins each morning with a blank piece of paper and a blank mind. Jackson expressed concern about the decline of cursive writing in schools, stating that "if a generation is lost it's never going to catch up again." He also criticized Microsoft fonts, saying "Microsoft fonts suck," and advised the audience to "get a fountain pen β get away from the ballpoint pen." Jackson shared personal anecdotes about his work, including a job on which he said he "lost money" and described as "the worst I've ever had." He noted that he owns 83 bottles of ink, 11 ink sticks, and 179 pens. Jackson argued that "there is something so special about things written by hand" and that "some things cannot be done any other way," such as writing a love letter. He also joked about creating a button with a short, sharp word to express frustration with technology.
“Microsoft fonts suck.”
“For most people the word 'ink' never enters your mind β only when you have to take a bank loan out to replace the cartridges on your printer at home.”
“I lost money on that job... I underestimated so much and the pressure of that job was absolutely the worst I've ever had.”
“There is something so special about things written by hand β some things cannot be done any other way; can you imagine writing a love letter in anything other than your own handwriting?”
World-renowned graphic designer and calligrapher Martin Jackson shares his thoughts on why ink and the art of writing are stillΒ ...
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