Showing posts with label 1970s. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1970s. Show all posts

[ixokp] Download Rose Avenue fonts from Set Sail Studios

Rose Avenue


Introducing Rose Avenue, an extra bold serif font with soft, charming rounded edges and curves. Rose Avenue brings chunky retro typography to the modern era, and includes 70 additional special characters with additional flair and flourishes - providing you with a variety of captivating custom text arrangements. Whether it's a fancy retro-inspired logo, or engaging bold header text - Rose Avenue is able to deliver.


Accessing Alternate Characters • Many letters of this font have multiple alternate versions (see final image). In order to access each one, simply make sure 'Standard Ligatures' are enabled, and follow your letter with a number. For example, typing 'A1A2A3A4A5' will generate the 5 alternate versions shown for capital A.


Accessing Ligatures • There are 10 lowercase ligatures (double letters) included. In order to access these, simply make sure 'Standard Ligatures' are enabled, and the ligatures will automatically generate as you type.

All special characters can also be accessed via a Glyphs panel.


Language Support • Rose Avenue supports the following languages; English, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, Swedish, Norwegian, Danish, Dutch, Finnish, Indonesian, Malay, Hungarian, Polish, Croatian, Turkish, Romanian, Czech, Latvian, Lithuanian, Slovak, Slovenian



Rose Avenue


[syycq] Download Plinc Tuggle fonts from House Industries

Plinc Tuggle


While we can’t comment of the suggested definitions for ‘tuggle’ that you might encounter online, we are happy to expound on Tuggle’s quirky and endearing characters. The gravity of its bellbottom slab-serif structure is mitigated by soft rounded corners, while surging swashes and globular stroke endings further attenuate Tuggle’s otherwise would-be uptight tenor. The ideal typographic solution for children’s blocks, candy packaging, vape shop signage, and hospital way finding. Pair Tuggle with an equally juicy script like Dave West’s Superstar. Designed by the Photo-Lettering staff, and digitized by Susana Carvalho.


TUGGLE CREDITS:

  • Typeface Design: Photo-Lettering Staff
  • Typeface Digitization: Susana Carvalho
  • Typeface Production: Bas Smidt
  • Typeface Direction: Erik van Blokland, Ben Kiel


Like all good subversives, House Industries hides in plain sight while amplifying the look, feel and style of the world’s most interesting brands, products and people. Based in Delaware, visually influencing the world.



Plinc Tuggle


[efddz] Download Chalet fonts from House Industries

Chalet


Experience the precision, elegance and history of the Chalet font family. This collection of ten typefaces in three unique styles is the creative genius of acclaimed clothing designer René Albert Chalet. Originally used in his early advertising campaigns, Chalet appropriately echoes the attitude of its creator: function with flair. Modest and unpretentious yet bold and daring, Chalet’s distinctive air allows for a variety of uses ranging from text to display applications. Add modern panache to any design with the Chalet font family.


CHALET CREDITS:

  • Typeface Design: Ken Barber, René Albert Chalet
  • Typeface Production: Rich Roat
  • Typeface Direction: Ken Barber, Andy Cruz


Like all good subversives, House Industries hides in plain sight while amplifying the look, feel and style of the world’s most interesting brands, products and people. Based in Delaware, visually influencing the world.



Chalet


[cznsd] Download Plinc Beaux Arts Didot fonts from House Industries

Plinc Beaux Arts Didot


Firmin Didot is credited with establishing the Modern genre of serif typefaces, of which Beaux Arts Didots stands as an exemplary model. Like the French neoclassical architecture of its namesake, Beaux Arts has all the hallmarks of the early nineteenth-century style: a clear and confident construction consisting of simple yet strong lines. Use it for elegant and formal settings, or when a direct typographic tone is desired. Mix it with styles of similar sensibilities such as Plinc Hanover and Davison Spencerian. Digitized from the original Photo-Lettering film matrix in 2014 by Jean-Baptiste Levée.


BEAUX ARTS DIDOT CREDITS:

  • Typeface Design: Photo-Lettering Staff
  • Typeface Digitization: Jean-Baptiste Levée
  • Typeface Production: Ben Kiel
  • Typeface Direction: Ken Barber


Like all good subversives, House Industries hides in plain sight while amplifying the look, feel and style of the world’s most interesting brands, products and people. Based in Delaware, visually influencing the world.



Plinc Beaux Arts Didot


[itfhx] Download VLNL Jelly Donuts fonts from VetteLetters

VLNL Jelly Donuts


VLNL Jelly Donuts’ 


Jelly Donuts is the round sibling of VLNL Donuts. Equally funky, just round. 

Like its counterpart Jelly Donuts is heavily infused by hip 1970s geometric fonts like Blippo, Pump and ITC Bauhaus. It nonetheless has both feet in this modern day and age. Meticulously designed and tightly spaced, VLNL Jelly Donuts is very suitable for logos, headlines and music artwork. We especially recommend using it on big 12" album covers. 


VLNL Jelly Donuts is deep fried, filled with cream, custard or jam, and ometimes glazed or covered in a variety of sweetness: sprinkles, cinnamon, coconut, chopped peanuts, powdered sugar or maple syrup. 


As a very sweet and saturated snack should, VLNL Jelly Donuts is fitted with a full set of alternate swoosh caps that can be deployed to liven up your already ‘out there’ designs. You can’t get any more funky than this.



VLNL Jelly Donuts


[jnibv] Download Carnival fonts from House Industries

Carnival


Unlike the modest fonts in your menu content with discreetly imparting information, Carnival is conspicuous by design. Deliberately engineered to attract eyeballs, the typeface’s unmistakable silhouette produces a dramatic visual texture that stands out in print, on screen, or in any environment where your message demands to be noticed. The steady yet vibrant rhythm created by its letterforms also makes Carnival ideal for fashioning alphabet patterns and graphic devices.


Flaunting a lean slender body anchored by stout stroke endings, Carnival turns conventional typographic thinking on its head by inverting the relative thickness of its stems and serifs. This reverse-contrast approach stretches all the way back to the roots of modern advertising, when similar types became the favorite for posters, packaging, and loads of consumer products during the 1800s.


The striking style prevailed well into the next century, as Harold Horman, co-founder of New York City-based Photo-Lettering. Inc., modernized a version for the company’s popular film-typesetting service in the early 1940s. Digitized and expanded by Dan Reynolds in 2013, Carnival had previously been used exclusively for House Industries projects. Now you can get in on the action, and use this stunning slice of type history anytime you want your work to turn heads.


SUGGESTED USES

Carnival’s unique character commands attention, making it the perfect voice for promotional pieces, editorial design, labels, packaging, posters, and any other application that needs to strike the right tone.


Like all good subversives, House Industries hides in plain sight while amplifying the look, feel and style of the world’s most interesting brands, products and people. Based in Delaware, visually influencing the world.



Carnival


[nltzs] Download Atwin fonts from Cubic Type

Atwin


Atwin is a modern remake of Gemini, hence the name (Atwin = “A twin” = Gemini, the twin of the zodiac). It is inspired by the angular and unusual forms of the numbers on bank cheques (so-called MICR).

Large blobs of weight are thrown around the glyphs often in unfamiliar patterns. It makes for an angular but also blobby design that disrupts and breaks away from tradition.

You should use Atwin to add flair and confidence to sci-fi, futurist, outré, or just plain unusual materials. Good in displays sizes.

Latin-based scripts are well supported with a generous supply of punctuation and diacritics.

Kerned to perfection. Tight.



Atwin


Albion Seventies fonts from Greater Albion Typefounders - (sisuv)

Albion Seventies


Albion Seventies is a display typeface from that fun era of psychedelic wallpaper, bright colours and bright orange everything! It's a splendid face for posters and banners, and did we mention, it works really well with orange backgrounds?



Albion Seventies


Download Praline MCL Fonts Family From My Creative Land

Download Praline MCL Fonts Family From My Creative Land
Download Praline MCL Fonts Family From My Creative Land Download Praline MCL Fonts Family From My Creative LandDownload Praline MCL Fonts Family From My Creative Land



The family contains two fonts - charged with OpenType features vintage soft serif and a sans serif with corresponding forms and softness.


Serif: Grandma’s sweet and soft recipe with more than 1300 ingredients (lots of alternates, swashes, ligatures and design elements). This font takes it’s inspiration from Goudy, Windsor and Bookman typefaces. Watch the video showing the font stylistic alternates and swashes in action https://youtu.be/_MHNizwq1bM


Sans serif: Soft and friendly, it is a simple 1970s inspired geometric grotesque to use as a support font with Praliné Serif or any other serif or script font of your choice.


Both fonts fully unicode mapped so can be used in any application.


Get your designs look 1970s!



Download Praline MCL Fonts Family From My Creative LandDownload NowView Gallery


Download Heller Sans JNL Fonts Family From Jeff Levine

Download Heller Sans JNL Fonts Family From Jeff Levine


Heller Sans JNL is based on the main letterforms of an experimental alphabet designed by Steven Heller; noted author of over 170 books on design and visual culture. Some modifications were made in turning his design into a digital font. In his own words, here is the background to this typeface: “I recently recovered this from the junk heap. It is a yellowing photostat of my first and only typeface design (1969-70). Total folly! At the time I was smitten by Art Moderne lettering. I called it “Klaus Boobala Bold” because I liked the K and B. I’ve lost the letters S through Z, which were made. The letters were drawn with compass, Techno pen (that frequently clogged). as well as a triangle and T-square. The inline and outline made no real logical sense. I based the design, in part, on Kabel, Avant Garde and it was a product of whatever I could accomplish with those tools. The caps-only alphabet was photographed and produced as a film negative that was cut in foot-long strips and spliced to fit on a Typositor reel. Sadly, the negatives made for the font were too brittle and the splice snapped apart in the Typositor. I worked on it for well over a month and used the face only once. I realized with this attempt, like so many other times I attempted different challenges, that type design — indeed mechanical drawing — was not my strong suit.” Heller Sans JNL is available in both regular and oblique versions.


Download Heller Sans JNL Fonts Family From Jeff Levine