Centennial Script was designed and cut by Hermann Ihlenburg in 1876 (the centennial of American independence, hence the typeface’s name) for the MacKellar, Smiths & Jordan foundry in Philadelphia. Ihlenburg was then only 33...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 27, 2022
Messenger is a redux of two mid-1970s Markus Low designs: Markus Roman, an upright calligraphic face, and Ingrid, a popular typositor-era script. Through the original film faces were a couple of years apart and...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 18, 2024
Kelvingrove is a charming Copperplate-inspired small-cap typeface. It features alternate K, Q, R, and a small ampersand that can be accessed via OpenType stylistic alternates in applications that support them. The numerals are properly...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 18, 2024
“Eddy” is short for my dirty version of an Edwardian Script. I give you three versions, Big Splats, Splats and Rough. You should mix them for best results. Your splashy designer Gert Wiescher
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 27, 2022
Four fonts — found on a map of America, created by the spanish cartographer Diego Gutiérrez and the dutch engraver Hieronymus Cock anno 1562. From the start of the digitization by Sebastian Nagel in...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 19, 2024
Some of the most popular typefaces in history are those based on the types of the sixteenth-century printer, publisher, and type designer Claude Garamond, whose sixteenth-century types were modeled on those of Venetian printers...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022