4,393 search results (0.023 seconds)
  1. SF Arch Rival Extended - Unknown license
  2. SF Foxboro Script Extended - Unknown license
  3. SF Port McKenzie Extended - Unknown license
  4. SF Port McKenzie Extended - Unknown license
  5. SF Foxboro Script Extended - Unknown license
  6. SF Foxboro Script Extended - Unknown license
  7. SF Fortune Wheel Extended - Unknown license
  8. SF Pale Bottom Extended - Unknown license
  9. SF Square Root Extended - Unknown license
  10. SF Port McKenzie Extended - Unknown license
  11. SF Chrome Fenders Extended - Unknown license
  12. SF Port McKenzie Extended - Unknown license
  13. SF Minced Meat Extended - Unknown license
  14. SF Chrome Fenders Extended - Unknown license
  15. SF Groove Machine Extended - Unknown license
  16. PF Tempesta Seven Extended - Unknown license
  17. SF Arch Rival Extended - Unknown license
  18. SF Atarian System Extended - Unknown license
  19. SF Solar Sailer Extended - Unknown license
  20. SF Groove Machine Extended - Unknown license
  21. SF Square Root Extended - Unknown license
  22. SF Fortune Wheel Extended - Unknown license
  23. SF Comic Script Extended - Unknown license
  24. SF Pale Bottom Extended - Unknown license
  25. SF Minced Meat Extended - Unknown license
  26. SF Solar Sailer Extended - Unknown license
  27. SF Shai Fontai Extended - Unknown license
  28. SF Atarian System Extended - Unknown license
  29. SF Atarian System Extended - Unknown license
  30. SF Outer Limits Extended - Unknown license
  31. SF Shai Fontai Extended - Unknown license
  32. PF Tempesta Five Extended - Unknown license
  33. 20th Century ExtraBold Extended by Wooden Type Fonts, $20.00
    A version of Futura, but very bold, ideal for modern advertising.
  34. Monotype Egyptian 72 Extended by Monotype, $29.99
  35. HWT Roman Extended Fatface by Hamilton Wood Type Collection, $24.95
    The design of the first "Fat Face" is credited to Robert Thorne just after 1800 in England. It is considered to be the first type style designed specifically for display or jobbing, rather than for book work. The first instance of Fat Face in wood type is found in the first wood type specimen book ever produced: Darius Wells, Letter Cutter 1828. This style was produced by all early wood type manufacturers. The style is derived from the high contrast, thick and thin Modern style of Bodoni and Didot developed only decades previously. The extended variation makes the face even more of a display type and not at all suitable for text. This type of display type was used to compete with the new Lithographic process which allowed for the development of the poster as an artform unto itself. This new digitization by Jim Lyles most closely follows the Wm Page cut. The crisp outlines hold up at the largest point sizes you can imagine. This font contains a full CE character set.
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