With minor modifications that make the font fit together the way it does, especially the 's', it appears to be Avernus URW in bold. I only found a link to the Medium though (see link). ITC Ronda looks nearly the same with bold styles easy to find. The 's' is like the 's' in Avernus, and the crossbar of the 'e' doesn't slant like it does in your image (straight across). I noticed that Quadranta has the 's' and the connecting letters, except here the 'r' is different.
Edited on Jul 19, 2013 at 10:04 by Jared82CA
Did you look at anything in the Proxima Nova family? There are literally over 100 variations nearly alike. Look especially at the ExtraCondensed Bold. You'll have to rough up the characters yourself. I started to look at fonts with the erosion built in--the 'I's seems to have identical erosion marks. At first the 'G's appear to be eroding identically, but they are slightly different. The 'M's, however, show completely different erosion marks. I don't know where your image is from...if it's from a screen cap, f/x could have provided the markings...if it is from some type of display image or signage, the identical/similar characters could have received their markings from a cut-and-paste of individual letters.
I have the font on my computer and recommended it at church, too. It's in the Bradley family. Bradley Gratis is available here on DaFont (see link). The tail of the 'y', the apostrophe, and the right foot of the 'K' are slightly different, but that is all. Bradley Regular is available at fonts.com...the apostrophe matches, but the 'y' and the 'K' are still different.
It appears to match exactly with Standard CT (CastleType). It is a cousin to Helvetica and very similar to Akzidenz-Grotesk.
Edited on Jun 20, 2011 at 20:28 by Rodolphe
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