Software Developed by Harolds Fonts
The VIRILE fonts are adapted from a pair of analog Art Nouveau fonts. The name isnt so good but thats what it was. You can use the fonts separately or use the Solid as a fill for the Open. Each font includes caps, lowercase, numbers, punctuation, ...
The regular Trudeau font preserves the look of letters held between top and bottom rails. The font includes several pairs of brackets which cap the ends and create a sort of cartouche. The new Trudeau Sans has no rails, making the font much more ...
SYNCOPATED SCRIPT was loosely inspired by the work of the painter Stuart Davis. His jazzy canvases bridge Cubism and Pop Art, often featuring words, written in this style and others. Daviss work always seems fresh and inventive to me. After looking ...
By SOLEMNITY is my digital interpretation of SOLEMNIS, an analog font by Gunter Gerhard Lange, 1952. I was unable to find a digital version of this distinctive font, and was eager to work with it. So I drew this one afresh. The name is intended to ...
RUBAIYAT is based on this wonderful hand-lettered fruit-crate label with an exotic "Eastern" feel. I redrew the 7 letters, then invented the missing ones and other characters. I also created a set of six fonts--Engraved, Inline, Solid, Double Line, ...
My version of ROOSEVELT began with a request by Rob Case for the font once used on Aeolian pianos and organs. I drew the letters from analog examples, regularizing and filling out the set. Subsequently another correspondent, Richard Vance, told me ...
OKLAHOMA was inspired by the opening titles of the classic film of the same name (1955, directed by Fred Zinnemann, art direction by Joseph C. Wright.) A fancy wood type that sings, a nice compliment to the early 1900s setting of the story. If only ...
MYSTIC PROPHET is my third font inspired by ...
RADIO was inspired by the old logo of NPR, National Public Radio. Obviously, the line pattern suggests broadcasting. The letters are square and of a uniform width, great for short headings, drop caps, and the like. Includes caps, numbers, ...
LE FILM is my digital interpretation of the classic analog Art Deco font of the same name. Le Film (variously known as Film and Initiales Film) was designed by Marcel Jacno and released in 1927 by Deberny & Peignot of Paris. The characters are ...