Filmotype Glenlake
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…
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…
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…
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…
Filmotype Harvard was released in 1955 following the released of Filmotype Horizon the year prior at the request of customers looking for a wider version of Filmotype Horizon. This playful…
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…
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…
Filmotype Honey was released by Filmotype in the mid-1950s as part of its handlettered script styles and it gained wildly popular use with many corporations throughout the 1950s and 1960s.…
Filmotype Horizon was among the company’s earliest brush lettered casuals and was Introduced by Filmotype in the early-to-mid 1950s. This playful script was among Filmotype’s most popular brush script style…