About FHA Broken Gothic No2 NC Regular font
See also:
http://www.fontspace.com/the-fontry/broken-poster
To download our FHA Broken Gothic Specimen pdf:
http://thefontry.com/fha_broken_poster/FHA_Broken_Gothic_Specimen.pdf
Purchase from the Fontry:
http://www.thefontry.com/fhabrokengothic
Or at Myfonts:
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/fontry-west/fha-broken-gothic/
To visit the Fontry for more great fonts:
http://www.thefontry.com/
Email Fontry/Fontry West:
[email protected]
More than a century ago, Frank H. Atkinson presented this hand lettered style as Broken Poster. It was one of a hundred styles he demonstrated in his manual on sign painting. Even before his book was published (and certainly after), Broken Poster was a favorite with sign painters and letterers. It has graced show cards and movie posters, signs and windows displays, and advertisements of all varieties. We presented the our first digital revival of this classic in 2000. It is long overdue for an upgrade.
Broken Gothic expands the basic Broken Poster to four weights, two specialty formats and some cool layed effects. The language base includes Greek, Cyrillic, Latin A, and some of Latin B and Latin Extended. There are also some nice alternates and ligatures. All weights are quite suited to posters, headlines, display copy, web headers, etc.
At first glance, Broken Gothic may seem to have limited uses. Give it a chance and it will surprise you. Broken shouts out that there is a sale, a giant monster or the end of the world. Broken Gothic is comfortable in a wide range of themes and applications from zombie movie titles to salsa jar labels. While I can't recommend it for text, Broken is great for headers, banners, signs, titles, product presentation and other display applications. When you need a rough customer, Broken Gothic fills the bill.
Free for Personal Use
This fonts are authors' property, and are either shareware, demo versions or public domain. The licence mentioned above the download button is just an indication. Please look at the readme-files in the archives or check the indicated author's website for details, and contact him if in doubt. If no author/licence is indicated that's because we don't have information, that doesn't mean it's free.