font_designer: Patrick Griffin
Initially offered in the late 1950s, Filmotype Panama was one of Filmotype’s ‘tipsy’ serif Free Style typefaces which featured a delightful blend between casual serif and latin styles. Remastered and expanded with exacting precision...
Originally released in the mid 1960s, Filmotype expanded its Formal Script category with Filmotype Yale. This elegant script is a natural for wedding invitations and formal occasions while offering a more delicate and slightly...
Introduced by Filmotype in 1955, Carmen with its unique personality joined Filmotype’s Casuals category with its own unique flair. With its slanted brush and speedy informal nature, It retains the mid-century playfulness of sho-card...
Introduced by Filmotype in 1955, Filmotype Keynote was inspired by bold advertisers handlettering styles made popular in the late 1930s through the early 1940s. Remastered and expanded with exacting precision from the original filmstrips,...
Filmotype LaCrosse was released by Filmotype in the late 1950s as an attractive informal casual pen-script, also known as a jewelers script based on its use in department store catalogs and luxury store signage....
Filmotype Candy picks off where her younger sister Filmotype Brooklyn left off. Without the ability to embolden type photographically using its machine, Filmotype Introduced a customer requested bold weight of Filmotype Alice in the...
Released by Filmotype in the late 1950s, Filmotype Kellog expanded its Scripts category with this informal style brush script inspired by sign painter classic brush script styles and expanded to allow a wider line...
Originally offered by Filmotype in the early 1950s, Filmotype Lakeside was among its earliest informal style brush script typefaces inspired by sign painter classic brush script styles. Filmotype Lakeside was developed from the original...
Introduced by Filmotype in the early- to mid-1950s, Filmotype Hemlock owes its origins to classic sign painter sho-card lettering popular in the late 1940s through the 1950s. This thick upright script was among Filmotype’s...
Introduced by Filmotype in the early to mid-1950s, Filmotype Homer was created in response to customer demand for a wider brush script expanding on Filmotype’s popular sign painter sho-card lettering styles used in the...