More than a century earlier, Frank H. Atkinson provided this hand lettered design as Broken Poster. It was among a hundred styles he demonstrated in his handbook on indication painting. Even prior to his book was released (and certainly after), Broken Poster was a preferred with indication painters and letterers. It has actually beautified show cards and movie posters, indications and windows displays, and advertisements of all ranges. We presented the our first digital revival of this traditional in 2000. It is long past due for an upgrade.
Broken Gothic broadens the basic Broken Poster to 4 weights, two specialized formats and some cool layed results. The language base includes Greek, Cyrillic, Latin A, and a few of Latin B and Latin Extended. There are also some good alternates and ligatures. All weights are quite suited to posters, headlines, display copy, web headers, etc.
At first glance, Broken Gothic may appear to have actually restricted uses. Offer it a possibility and it will surprise you. Damaged shouts out that there is a sale, a huge beast or the end of the world. Broken Gothic is comfortable in a large range of themes and applications from zombie movie titles to salsa jar labels. While I can't advise it for text, Broken is great for headers, banners, signs, titles, product presentation and other display screen applications. When you require a rough customer, Broken Gothic fills the bill.
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