The Ambrosia font family contains a series of very legible typefaces, suitable for both text setting/print and display use. Ambrosia comes in 6 different styles (regular, italic, bold, bold italic, light condensed and light...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 18, 2024
Tucked inside the November 5, 1927 issue of a German signpainters’ trade paper was a single sheet headed Der Schilder und Schriftenmaler, which featured an alphabet called “Neue Fraktur”. An exuberant (if somewhat unconventional)...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 18, 2024
Something about the swoopy loops in the uppercase characters of this typeface, originally called “Ronde”, reminds one of the signature ‘do of a certain real-estate-mogul-turned-TV-celebrity, and so this font was named. Delightfully different, this…
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 18, 2024
An old Art Nouveau typeface named “Daphne” provided the inspiration for this decidely different font. This version is upright, but the linocut treatment employed visually suggests the slight rightward slant of the original typeface....
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 18, 2024
The letterforms are based on Inserat Cursive, a bold script popular in the late nineteenth century; the treatment was suggested by cover artwork for Graphic Styles from Victorian to Post-Modern, written by Stephen Heller...
by · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified September 19, 2015