Filmotype Andrew
At it's customers request, Filmotype developed custom font weights and widths of its library throughout its history. Fimotype Andrew honors that same tradition as it was derived from Filmotype Athens,…
At it's customers request, Filmotype developed custom font weights and widths of its library throughout its history. Fimotype Andrew honors that same tradition as it was derived from Filmotype Athens,…
At it's customers request, Filmotype developed a narrower version of its Filmotype Arthur font in the early 1950s as an extra-condensed upright bold sho-card brush script for very narrow setting…
Likely inspired by the wildly popular Dom Casual typeface by Peter Dombrezian in 1951, Filmotype Arthur was introduced in the early 1950s as a condensed upright sho-card brush script for…
Introduced by Filmotype in 1955, Filmotype Athens was among Filmotype’s first condensed handlettered sho-card brush script faces for narrow applications where economy and style were paramount to the design while…
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…
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…
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…
Introduced by Filmotype in 1955, Filmotype Hickory was created in response to customer demand for a bolder weight of its popular Filmotype Honey typeface. This bold upright hand-lettered pen script…
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…
Released by Filmotype in 1955, Filmotype Hudson was among Filmotype’s most popular upright informal style brush scripts inspired by sign painter classic brush script styles popular in the 1950s in…