Filmotype Jupiter
Filmotype Jupiter is among the most expressive bold upright scripts in the Filmotype library with a smooth flowing handwritten style and charming personality, it was originally released by Filmotype in…
Filmotype Jupiter is among the most expressive bold upright scripts in the Filmotype library with a smooth flowing handwritten style and charming personality, it was originally released by Filmotype in…
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…
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…
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…
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…
Filmotype Kitten followed in the footsteps of Filmotype Ledger as a high-style connecting script with strong contrasting thick and thin strokes to create an elegant hand-lettered look which found the…
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…
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…
Among the very first handwritten script fonts offered by Filmotype in the beginning of the 1950s, Filmotype LaSalle was designed by Ray Baker, a former Lettering Inc employee at the…
Introduced by Filmotype in the early 1950s, Filmotype Leader was inspired by speedy sho-card bold lettering styles prominently featured in automotive advertising and editorial designs of the late 1940s and…