Kamal Shedge
Kamal Shedge was an Indian typographer and type designer. He is well known for his title designs and logos for numerous Marathi theatre plays, periodicals, newspapers, Hindi and Marathi films, book covers and record labels.
Early life
Shedge was born on 22 June 1935 in Girgaon area of Bombay. He completed his education at the Orient High School in Girgaon. From an early age, Shedge was interested in reading, copied figures from magazines like Filmfare and created innovative letters. This is how he learned some basics of art as he did not study art formally at any art institute.Shedge wanted to become a story writer. Although, it became difficult to pursue this field after his poor performance in the high school exams. At that time, his father worked as a calligrapher in the art department of The Times of India. He asked him to join his field of work. Initially, Shedge's non-design background came across as an administration hurdle. It was only later that Walter Langhammer, then head of art department intervened after seeing his work and made way for him to join. Thereby in 1955, Shedge began working in the art department of the Times of India. He was given small jobs to start with, which included completing the sketches of senior artists in the department.
Career
In 1959, Ramesh Sanzgiri joined the Times of India as the art director. He provided Shedge with insights about how to design a title rather than just putting together a combination of letters. Shedge then created designs for headlines in magazines such as Filmfare, Femina and Madhuri. His artistic prowess gained prominence with the launch of the Maharashtra Times in 1962. He had designed the masthead for the daily which set a benchmark for layout design in newspapers.During this time, advertising in media was expanding to Indian languages. However, little variety of lettering in Devanagari script was available at the time. In order to accomplish this task, it was necessary to have a transliteration in Devanagari script that could communicate the same meaning as English. Shedge introduced Devanagari alphabets with different weights, similar to the serif and sans-serif alphabets in English. This completely changed the world of lettering in advertising. His work was a precursor to the fonts we see on the computer today.