A long lost Art Nouveau wood type from the Hamilton Museum Collection stimulates the excesses of Victorian style and the similarly wacky 1960s Psychedelic age revival of the Victorian type designs. Free flowing organic designs that grew with Art Nouveau in the late 1800s were straight referenced and additional distorted with phototype in the late 1960s. This style, referred to as Arabesque, was produced by the Morgans & & Wilcox Co. and the Wm. Page Co. as almost identical styles. Both manufacturers were gotten by Hamilton and offered briefly by Hamilton as style # 618.
.This curious wood type defies most of the basic tenets of type style and what enters your mind when one believes "wood type". Numerous characters have a dynamic eccentricity that were all left true to the original style. Extra characters were created to submit the basic range of characters discovered in digital fonts. This typeface consists of over 280 characters for complete unicode support of Western and Main European Latin characters.
.Font Family: HWT Arabesque Regular