font_foundry: RMU

Plastica Pro

Plastica Pro font

Plastica Pro, inspired by a J. Lehmann design, is an ideal plastic font for posters, logos, corporate identity, headlines, booktitles, car and truck design etc. The Plus style includes Cyrillic and Greek glyphs.

Buchfraktur

Buchfraktur font

The late-19th and early-20th century standard blackletter family in Germany, in three weights. To get access to all ligatures, it is recommended to activate both Standard and Discretionary Ligatures. You find the round s...

Erler Titling

Erler Titling font

Herbert Thannhaeuser’s 1953 titling font Erler-Versalien which was distributed by Typoart in hot-metal times, was carefully redrawn and redesigned. To preserve its handwritten character, irregularities in the letters’ strokes were left as they are…

Steinschrift Pro

Steinschrift Pro font

Steinschrift Pro is a condensed sans serif font which comes with West and Central European as well as with a Cyrillic character set.

Borghese

Borghese font

Borghese – a 1904 Schelter & Giesecke font in Art Nouveau style was completely redesigned and is an ideal body text companion of display fonts like Ridinger or Reznicek.

Gillray Pro

Gillray Pro font

Based upon H. Broedel’s Hogarth Script, Gillray Pro, an RMU design, comes with two weights: Light and Medium. This formal script font is ideal for invitations, diplomas, certificates, book titles, ads etc.

Emilia

Emilia font

Emil Rudolf Weiss’s 1920s Antiqua font family redrawn and redesigned for nowadays use.

Reklamefraktur

Reklamefraktur font

Reklamefraktur is a stout, eye-catching blackletter font for labels, product branding, posters, ads, the internet and much more.

Parcival Antiqua

Parcival Antiqua font

Schelter & Giesecke’s highly esteemed font family, cut by Herbert Thannhaeuser, freshly redesigned for present-day use.

Emilia Gotisch

Emilia Gotisch font

Weiss’ gothic-style blackletter font completely redrawn and redesigned for present-day use. This font contains a bunch of useful ligatures, and by typing ‘N’, ‘o’ and period plus activating the OT feature Ordinals you get...