Meet Greenleaf, a display family that blends elegant art deco details, extensive linguistic support, and technically innovative features to create a bold impression that’s ideal for branding, signage, packaging, invitations, and so much…
by Staff · Published February 27, 2020
· Last modified December 28, 2022
It’s Filmotype Maxwell! a bouncy interlocking serif originally released as a Free Style typeface by Filmotype in the early 1960s that captures the essence of the mod design movement. This amazing font has over...
by · Published July 11, 2019
· Last modified November 6, 2024
A meeting of Byzantine and Art Deco forms, Aphasia began as a series of handwritten captions to accompany drawings in the early 1990s. The drawings were abandoned to allow the lettering to become the...
by Staff · Published February 26, 2016
· Last modified December 29, 2022
Oddsorts’ Ciao Bella family pairs the funky elegance of a hand-drawn copperplate script with a bouquet of ornament fonts. Ciao Bella’s expansive range of alternate opening and closing forms, word-connecting ribbons, and swash characters...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified October 14, 2015
A meeting of Byzantine and Art Deco forms, Aphasia began as a series of handwritten captions to accompany drawings in the early 1990s. The drawings were abandoned to allow the lettering to become the...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified November 6, 2024
A collaboration based on lettering by Vermont illustrator/artist Mary Trafton and brought to typographic life by Charles Gibbons, the Full Moon Suite is a collection of casual typefaces called after folk names for full...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified November 6, 2024
Charles Gibbons’ Fleischman BT Pro revives J.M. Fleischman’s quirky and elegant text faces of the 1730s. Born in Germany, Fleischman worked in Holland, primarily at Enschedé en Zonen where he cut dozens of faces....
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
As one of earliest Free Style faces released in the early 1950s by Filmotype, Filmotype Nemo captures the more iconic playful type styles made popular in the early 1950s when a clear message needed...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
Filmotype Atlas was among the company’s earliest brush lettered casuals and was introduced by Filmotype in the early-to-mid 1950s. It perfectly captures informal sign painter hand lettering while providing comfortable readability. Filmotype Atlas…
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
Filmotype Rose was among the company’s earliest original serif styles introduced by Filmotype in the early-to-mid 1950s. This wonderful wide serif style was inspired by the art deco movement of the 1930s. Filmotype Rose...