Initially designed in the early-to-mid 1950s, Filmotype Ginger helped usher in the Mod typographic stylings of the early 1960s visual aesthetic yet it retains a classic and timeless feel. Remastered and expanded with exacting...
Initially designed and released in 1955, this Gothic Sans Serif was remastered and expanded with exacting precision and includes a full international character compliment, automatic fractionals, ordinals, an all CAPS setting, and a suite...
Filmotype Kentucky was released by Filmotype in 1955 as a more condensed italic version of its first connecting script face, Filmotype Harmony, which was originally designed by Ray Baker. Filmotype regularly created derivative styles...
Filmotype Kingston was released by Filmotype in the early to mid-1950s as part of its handlettered script styles and it gained wildly popular use with many Filmotype owners as the first true italic version...
Filmotype Alice marks the beginnings of the casual handwritten script aesthetic. Introduced by Filmotype in the late 1950s, it perfectly captures the mid-century playfulness of hand lettering while providing comfortable readability. Filmotype Alice…
Initially designed in the early-to-mid 1950s, Filmotype Fashion picks up where Futura left off but with a looser take on a geometric design and drawn wider to capture a more sophisticated 1960s visual aesthetic...
Filmotype Hamlet was released by Filmotype in 1955 as a condensed version of it’s first connecting script face Filmotype Harmony originally designed by Ray Baker. Filmotype regularly created derivative styles and weights of its...
Filmotype Harmony was the first connecting handwritten script face released by Filmotype in 1950 originally designed by Ray Baker. Ray designed Harmony as a proof of concept that the Filmotype machine could be used...
Initially designed in the early-to-mid 1950s, Filmotype Giant is part of a larger group of condensed sans serifs offered by Filmotype at the demand of its customers based on their versatility, legibility, and timeless...
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...