Pixel

MyPreciousss3

Olijfje, Tijgertje en CoCo

People simply love
❤️ cats! Stats after less than 24 hours in Divoom® community:

  • More followers;
  • many likes;
  • very, very much views [>2.8K];
  • and funny responses.

Bring the 80s to your desktop

Matriks 3 examples

Meet Matriks 3, a small monospaced type family specially developed for day-to-day use on screen. Meticulously build on a 5×7 matrix: five pixels for x-height, plus one pixel for capitals and ascenders, and another pixel for descenders.


By just moving one pixel at a time, the Matriks fonts (Dunglish for ‘matrix’), took shape. It is astonishing to see how far one can push the contours of the glyphs to sometimes weird graphics but still make us think we’re reading Roman characters! Special attention has been given to the bold weight. In fact, contrast in letterforms increases readability.

With more than 200 glyphs both weights contain a full Google Fonts Basic character set.

Now add this vintage typographic look to your font collection and get your copies for just 5.00 EUR per font. Just send me a DM: DesignIsFijn@iCloud.com or use this form.

Bikini Bottom

SpongeBob SquarePants

Back once again... the energetic sponge from Bikini Bottom SpongeBob SquarePants! Build in 33 frames for just 0,1 seconds of animation... but so much fun to do! :)

Back on track

Hyundai Getz animation

SUMMER 2022: On a road (+ boat) trip to København!

Happy Mac

Happy Mac animation

The ‘Happy Macintosh’; inspired by the ubiquitous round yellow smile face. Original design by Susan Kare, around 1984.

Ping (Pong)

Pong game

Pong is one of the earliest arcade video games, first released in 1972 by Atari. It is a two-player game based on table tennis [ping pong]. The game features simple 2D graphics. It consists of two paddles used to return a bouncing ball back and forth across the screen. The score is kept by the numbers at the top of the screen.

I recreated this game in Python. A tiny project to further develop my OOP (Object-Oriented Programming) skills.

Pong code

You’ll notice that there are several lines in this program that start with a # symbol. The words following the # are a comment, added to make the code easier for users to read and understand.

For the type geeks: Typeface used for writing the code is Operator; a very fit workhorse specifically engineered for the screen by Hoefler&Co.