Greenleaf
Meet Greenleaf, a display family that blends elegant art deco details, extensive linguistic support, and technically innovative features to create a bold impression that’s ideal for branding, signage, packaging, invitations,…
Meet Greenleaf, a display family that blends elegant art deco details, extensive linguistic support, and technically innovative features to create a bold impression that’s ideal for branding, signage, packaging, invitations,…
A little goofy, a little nerdy, Winooski mixes loose pen-drawn gestures with legible forms to deliver a playful workhorse. It’s packed with goodies like small caps, ligatures, case-sensitive alternates, and…
Filmotype Adonis is one of the earliest casual handwritten scripts introduced by Filmotype in the early 1950s. It perfectly captures the mid-century playfulness of hand lettering while providing comfortable readability.…
Filmotype Atlas was among the company’s earliest brush lettered casuals and was introduced by Filmotype in the early-to-mid 1950s. It perfectly captures informal sign painter hand lettering while providing comfortable…
Filmotype Havana was among the company’s earliest connecting brush-lettered casuals and was introduced by Filmotype in 1955 as a smoother, condensed weight of its popular cousin Horizon. Filmotype Havana was…
It's Filmotype Maxwell! a bouncy interlocking serif originally released as a Free Style typeface by Filmotype in the early 1960s that captures the essence of the mod design movement. This…
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…
Originally released in 1955, Filmotype Orlando was one of Filmotype’s most successful Free Style typefaces based on its loose casual showcard lettering style which peaked in popularity during the mid-1950s.…
Introduced by Filmotype in 1955, Filmotype Parade was released to complement its slimmer cousin Orlando and afford Filmotype’s customers the ability to set the same playful casual look in an…
Filmotype Rose was among the company’s earliest original serif styles introduced by Filmotype in the early-to-mid 1950s. This wonderful wide serif style was inspired by the art deco movement of…