font_designer: Neil Summerour
Filmotype Horizon was among the company’s earliest brush lettered casuals and was Introduced by Filmotype in the early-to-mid 1950s. This playful script was among Filmotype’s most popular brush script style typefaces. Filmotype Horizon was...
Dancer was one of the first fonts to join Filmotype’s Casuals category in the early 1950s as its ‘house’ sho-card speed script. It’s wonderfully readable with a generous ‘x-height’ with a friendly informal nature...
Filmotype Harvard was released in 1955 following the released of Filmotype Horizon the year prior at the request of customers looking for a wider version of Filmotype Horizon. This playful natural brush script was...
Handcrafted by Lettering Inc as part of its core library of typefaces in the 1930s, Directors Gothic was dramatically expanded throughout the lifetime of the company and remains a timeless classic. Inspired by the...
Delphi grew from a logotype Lily Feinberg produced using Greek-column-inspired letterforms. As that concept expanded to include more and more letters, the typeface had its beginnings. Intertwined, kinetic, and deliberate, Delphi carves itself onto…
Anarcharsis was inspired by incomplete rubbing made from a stone wall located in the Bahamas. The character set was completed and modified to better suit digital type. The imperfections and quirkiness of the hand-carved...
Sometimes you get an idea stuck in your head and the only way to get rid of that demon is to put something down on paper. A year later the doodles became a skeleton,...
Sometimes you get an idea stuck in your head and the only way to get rid of that demon is to put something down on paper. A year later the doodles became a skeleton,...