Tag: Art

P22 Dada Font

Inspired by Dada typography and poetry circa 1920. The DaDa movement had much in common with the Italian Futurist movement. One might even consider DaDa to be the more impish cousin of Futurism, for both movements shared ideas relating to

P22 De Stijl Set Font

The Dutch De Stijl movement (1917-1931) sought to create an art which took abstraction to its logical extreme, as exhibited in the paintings of Piet Mondrian. Inspired by the movement’s philosophy of pure form, P22’s De Stijl set features three

Guillotine Font

Guillotine is inspired by an uncredited early 1970s film face called Rhythm Bold. While the original film type had plenty of round forms that were uneven and somewhat badly drawn to fit within the overwhelming pop wave of the time,

Acrom Font

Acrom is a geometric sans serif typeface with a minimal stroke contrast. It was designed with a modern, contemporary context in mind. Acrom is not merely mechanical, it can also be recognised as a natural typeface with subtle geometric aesthetics. The humanist

Megaphone Font

Designed by Steve Jackaman and Ashley Muir. It was our initial intention to develop a suitable lowercase for Les Usherwood’s ‘Elston’ typeface, based on a few characters from an old German typeface called Hermes Grotesque (Woellmer, Berlin). The new design

New Berlin Font

New Berlin! is a set of two sans serif fonts all crafted using the natural edges contours and turns possible with the size brush I used. The “Standard” font, also contains within it A-Z and 1-9 of the “rough” font,

Richler Font

An open, evenly spaced book face designed for quality headlines and enhanced readability in text. Published by ShinntypeDownload Richler

P22 Dard Hunter Font Set Font

Dard Hunter was arguably one of the most influential graphic designers to come out of the American Arts and Crafts movement. Here are more authentic Dard Hunter designs from his Roycroft era (1900-1910), authorized by his grandson, Dard Hunter III.

YWFT Wonderland Font

If R. Crumb met Frank the Bunny for drinks, they’d each order one bourbon, one scotch, and one Wonderland. Very aptly-named font. Go ask Alice. In fact, when the borogoves were done getting mimsy, YWFT Wonderland had ended up with

P22 Spiggie Pro Font

P22 Spiggie From the designer: “Spiggie is a sans-serif, whose name came to me on a Shetland beach. The beach traces a tight curve between the shoreline and the sea paralleled in the font’s controlled yet smooth character. The design language reaches

P22 Hopper Set Font

This font set is based on the handwriting styles of quintessential American artist Edward Hopper and his wife, Josephine Nivison Hopper, and was produced in conjunction with the Whitney Museum of American Art. Both artists kept a record of Edward’s

Ronsard Crystal Font

Designed by Steve Jackaman and Ashley Muir. The original Ronsard Crystal began its life as a single-weight photolettering font in the 1950s. We lliked it so much, that we decided to design four traditional weights to go with the original

Aston Font

Aston is a fantastic serif display typeface which is applicable for any type of graphic design – web, logo, print, motion graphics, etc. This font is unique and fresh with it`s creatively implemented organic elements. Published by FontfabricDownload Aston

P22 Eaglefeather Family Font

The fonts contained in this collection are a tribute to Frank Lloyd Wright, arguably the greatest architectural genius of his time. Wright produced a vast body of work that defined and redefined American architecture. His talent extended into the creation

YWFT Dekko Font

YWFT Dekko is an icon, symbol and pattern style dingbat font created with the ability to execute multiple design ideas. The font was designed with tight kerning, allowing the ability on certain letter combos to create intriguing pattern designs. This

Lupo Font

Font Lupo is the younger brother of Kapra. However, unlike Kapra it is characterized by the sharpness of the finish. It is inspired by a You And Me Monthly published by National Magazines Publisher RSW „Prasa” that appeared from Mai