Europa Text
This circa 1910 European face was introduced into the United States by a German type foundry traveling salesman during the great depression of the 1930s. We have used it quite successfuly in sizes as ...
This circa 1910 European face was introduced into the United States by a German type foundry traveling salesman during the great depression of the 1930s. We have used it quite successfuly in sizes as ...
A circa 1900 type from the foundry of W. Grauneau, Berlin. A great utility face as it works well as the "plain" face with other decorative type of the same era. Reads well in paragraphs of copy.
This font was originally called Mozaik. The lowercase postion has a few alternate characters in place of the basic ones.
This is another of those early 20th century, post art nouveau types from Europe. Probably German.
Tally Text Light is an early photolettering type, sometime in the 1940s, when words were hand assembled from individual film positives of the letters, then re-photographed. We made the bold face ...
Originally issued as Marggraff Bold Script by the Dresden foundry of A.G. Vorm BrĂ¼der Butter. Minor variations were given to a few letters to even the color.
A product of the Inland Type Foundry, some say stolen from a hand lettering job done by Goudy. (Goudy was one of those who said it!)
Carl Schraubstadter of the Inland Type Foundry probably had more to do with the design of this italic than he did with the roman. Great for Craftsman Era projects.
This would be a Clarendon if it weren't for the cute serifs, which set it apart. Reads well in copy blocks.
This is almost a necessity if you are doing reproductions of mid-19th century posters and playbills.