Guillotine is influenced by an uncredited early 1970s film face called Rhythm Vibrant. While the original film type had lots of round types that were uneven and rather badly drawn to fit within the overwhelming pop wave of the time, this digital incarnation disposes of all curves, relies on a much sharper grid, and abides by specific specifications of stroke widths and angles.
Guillotine is a thick poster classic, mechanically constructed yet plainly showing the idiosyncratic traits of hand drawing. Its forms embody the amalgamation of a plethora of impacts, such as woodcut letters, punch card types, and the special art nouveau principles that were popular in the 1960s and 1970s. The totality of the typeface is a strong display screen aesthetic that plays effectively anywhere the eye is indicated to see a strong however casual, sharp but hand crafted message.
This font comes in all popular formats for all typical platforms, and includes expanded language support to cover Western, Eastern and Central European Latin languages, along with Baltic, Celtic/Welsh, Esperanto, Maltese, and Turkish. A couple of alternate characters are sprayed throughout the character map.
Font Family: Guillotine Regular