font_shop: MyFonts

Stickley Decorations

Stickley Decorations font

Stickley Decorations contains 26 classic images from the pages of “The Craftsman,” the foremost journal of the American Arts & Crafts Movement of the early 20th Century. These are graphic elements that can be...

Cigar Label

Cigar Label font

This font was inspired by the embossed lettering on cigar boxes. The letters, or entire words, are often surrounded by raised dots, and that was our idea here. We drew this about 1997, and...

Estienne

Estienne font

Many fonts have carried this name. Ours goes back to just before 1900 in France. This general style had considerable popularity among job printers all over Europe. We have even seen it used for...

G&G

G&G font

G&G is the only authorized digitized version of the original handlettering of early 20th Century architects Charles and Henry Greene. This font is both accurate and authentic — it was adapted directly from the...

SB Expo

SB Expo font

Batchelder Ruff

Batchelder Ruff font

Batchelder Ruff is a “battered” version of the typeface used for titling in the catalogs and advertising of the Batchelder Tile Company in Pasadena, California in the 1920s. The original source characters were smoother,...

Batchelder Elements

Batchelder Elements font

Batchelder Elements contains 26 images from legendary Pasadena tilemaker Ernest Batchelder’s design books of the 1920s. From cats to ducks to flowers — even a bear and a couple of rabbits — there’s a...

Craftsman

Craftsman font

The Craftsman font is a faithful reproduction of the logo, or Title typeface used for Gustav Stickley’s “Craftsman” Magazine, the foremost journal of the American Arts & Crafts Movement during its publication years of...

Alaska

Alaska font

This interesting type was introduced by the Chicago firm of Marder, Luse & Company in 1890, about the time designers were beginning to lose some of the excessive ruffles and flourishes that characterized the...

Arcade

Arcade font

A neat face with pronounced spur serifs which several foundries have already digitized. We like ours better though, because we have drawn a lowercase which was lacking in the original. Barnhart Bros. & Spindler...