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3 821 posts    Polices identifiées

Posts par donshottype


13/06/2015 à 20:56  [réponse]  NY Mets

Lettering in a Tuscan mustache style.
Some fonts could be edited to make a match.
Don

Police suggérée : Buckhorn


13/06/2015 à 14:42  [réponse]  Ayudaa!!

Looks like Monotype Corsiva edited to slant it from a sloped to an upright position.
Don

Police suggérée : Monotype Corsiva


13/06/2015 à 03:15  [réponse]  Please help identify font

Seems to me that this is one of the photolettering era fonts that were probably not digitized. Could be Photolettering Inc., Letraset or ??? Might be an amateur digital from the 1990s...
Don


13/06/2015 à 03:06  [réponse]  Please help identify font



13/06/2015 à 02:57  [réponse]  Please help identify font

I recall those books and loved the Art Nouveau titling.
But when I checked this title against my Petzendorfer Treasury of Art Nouveau Alphabets I drew a blank
All I have to offer is a font with similar flavor
Don

Police suggérée : Eckmann


Édité le 13/06/2015 à 02:57 par donshottype


12/06/2015 à 10:17  [réponse]  Walmart price font?

Probably custom, but almost indistinguishable from Helvetica Bold, particularly if you thicken the vertical stroke on _$_.
Don

Police suggérée : Helvetica Bold



Logo for a German mustard https://www.flickr.com/photos/banger1977/3881185948
Not necessarily a specific font.
Don


12/06/2015 à 00:34  [réponse]  Monogram Font

Here is a lead. This looks similar to a font used by Pottery Barn for monograms. http://www.myfonts.com/WhatTheFont/forum/case/542990/
Don


11/06/2015 à 22:53  [réponse]  Monogram Font

Spring Creek Plain by GarageFonts is somewhat similar http://www.garagefonts.com/index.php/fonts/overview/GF090002X1
Don

Police suggérée : Spring Creek


Édité 2 fois. Dernière édition le 12/06/2015 à 11:04 par drf


11/06/2015 à 22:42  [réponse]  Monogram Font

The monogram letters are loosely based on 19th century Tuscan twig designs similar to the one digitized by Spiece Graphics as Astoria Antique http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/spiecegraphics/astoria-antique/
Don

Police suggérée : Astoria Antique


Édité le 12/06/2015 à 11:03 par drf


11/06/2015 à 22:41  [réponse]  Monogram Font

I suspect that these monoline letters with split ends are part of a proprietary font used by a company in the machine embroidery business. The fonts are in embroidery CAM software formats that cannot be easily used on a personal computer.
Most of these companies do not provide more than a limited set of letters as teaser images to discourage copying by competitors.
An exception is http://www.annaboveembroidery.com/frmo.html where you can click on an image to see a full alphabet.
This font style is sometimes called "fish tail" in the embroidery business.
A similar font in a format usable by a computer (otf, ttf etc.) would usually called Tuscan.
A somewhat similar monogram font in otf format is Tagliato Monogram http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/monogram/tagliato-monogram/
Don

Police suggérée : Tagliato Monogram


Édité le 12/06/2015 à 11:04 par drf


11/06/2015 à 17:38  [réponse]  What are the fonts ?

A revised and updated version of Odalisque is at https://www.myfonts.com/fonts/nicksfonts/odalisque-nf/
Based on the original design by Morris Fuller Benton which dates from 1927.
Today's trivia: The exotic word "Odalisque" refers to a female slave or concubine in a harem, especially one in the seraglio of the sultan of Turkey.
Don


Édité le 11/06/2015 à 17:41 par donshottype



Harold Lohner digitized the lighter version as Boomerang, but I can't find it on his website http://haroldsfonts.com/
Don



Another bold version.
Don

Police suggérée : Toffee Script



Claude has provided the correct identification.
The original font for this light weight script was Hansa Kursiv for Berthold, Berlin. Also sold under this name by Bauer, Stuttgart. Haas sold it as Favorita. A bold version was sold as Regina Kursiv by Berthold and AG für Schriftgieß, and as Favorita Halbfette by Haas.
I found legitimate digital versions of the bold font but not the light weight.
Don

Police suggérée : Regina Cursiv


11/06/2015 à 09:54  [réponse]  Le Petit Marseillais

_MARSEILLAIS_ seems to be lettering loosely based on the lower case of A.M. Cassandre’s quintessentially French font, Peignot, designed in 1937 for for Deberny & Peignot.
Don

Police suggérée : Peignot


11/06/2015 à 09:39  [réponse]  font LM

See also the Bitstream version of Bodoni Campanile
Don

Police suggérée : Modern 735


11/06/2015 à 09:37  [réponse]  font LM

Not font, but rather a trademark logo owned by Philip Morris http://trademark.markify.com/trademarks/ctm/l++m+quality+american+blend+l+m/009434754
The base letters, before the inline treatment may be derived from Bodoni Campanile, designed by R.H. Middleton for Ludlow, circa 1930. Vertically extended.
Don

Police suggérée : Bodoni Campanile



Good call koeikat.
The font description is interesting:
----
The Nyala typeface is named for the mountain nyala (tragelaphus buxtoni) a species of great African antelope native to the highlands of Ethiopia. The Ethiopic characters were designed by John Hudson, based on initial drawings by Geraldine Wade. The Latin characters were designed by John Hudson, and harmonise with the Ethiopic to facilitate the typesetting of texts including un-transliterated foreign names, technical terms, etc.
---
Don


10/06/2015 à 14:31  [réponse]  EmaPower

Outline added.
Don

Police identifiée : Millie Bold



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