The REALTOR ® block «R» logo consists of a letter R set in
Futura Typeface on a sharply contrasting rectangular background to form a block «R» with the term REALTOR ® centered underneath.
The Futura typeface is pretty much everywhere, a phenomenon Christian Weber and Sarah Schmitt call the «Futura type trap,» which also happens to be the name of their website.
The two designs make use of Kruger's iconic white on red
Futura typeface and feature the questions «Who is healed?
Using her instantly recognizable white - on - red
Futura typeface, the project will include an installation for the popular Lower East Side skate park located beneath the Manhattan Bridge, created in partnership with NYC Parks and skate park designer Steve Rodriguez; the design of a billboard on 17th Street and 10th Avenue in Chelsea; and a full wrap of a classic school bus that will serve as a mobile site for community engagement.
Not exact matches
Sans serif fonts like
Futura, Helvetica, and Gill Sans are three of the most popular
typefaces used on contemporary mysteries and thrillers.
During the early 1980s Barbara Kruger perfected a signature agitprop style, using cropped, large - scale, black - and - white photographic images juxtaposed ironic aphorisms, printed in
Futura Bold
typeface against black, white, or deep red text bars.
Kruger created her poster using her signature
Futura Bold Oblique
typeface, with white text on a red background.
«Having already done all the photography and illustrations the final touch was the custom
typeface 35 - FTR, now available at myfonts, I had initially set the book in a version of
Futura because it had the perfect look as it was used for the majority of the ads and manuals of the period, but I had had to make the point size fairly small to get the information in to the 192pp count.
It celebrates and rediscovers this timeless font through archive illustrations and informative essays, revealing fascinating facts like... did you know
Futura was Stanley Kubrick's favourite
typeface?
Charting its Bauhaus origins to its use as the first font on the moon in 1969,
Futura: The
Typeface is a new book that tells the story of how the typeface went from representing radicalism in design to depend
Typeface is a new book that tells the story of how the
typeface went from representing radicalism in design to depend
typeface went from representing radicalism in design to dependability.
There are many, many alternatives to
Futura; however, the four
typefaces below are a good place to start.
Futura: The
Typeface is a stunning examination of one of the most popular
typefaces ever created.
«Initial concepts for Modern Era referenced early 20th century geometric and realist sans - serif
typefaces, most notably
Futura and Neuzeit,» explains James Kape, one of the designers behind Omsetype.
Over the years there have been many
typeface releases touted as «improvements» to
Futura, with more contemporary proportions and larger x-heights, yet designers continue to reach for the original.
The
typeface feels like a more friendly version of
Futura, so if that is your thing, check out these other four alternatives below.
Her style — with her controlled use of
Futura Bold or Helvetica Ultra Condensed
typeface and a limited palette of black, white, and red, is instantly recognizable.