Download Cooper Fullface Italic Pro Font Family Style
Download Cooper Fullface Italic Pro Font Family
This typeface is the definitive version of Oswald Bruce Coopers lost typeface Cooper Fullface Italic. More…
The Barnhart Brothers & Spindler foundry, for whom Cooper had designed a number of typefaces, saw the potential of the typeface as a big seller. Richard McArther, General Manager of the foundry, referred to it as the hotsy stuff, though he was highly critical of a number of characters in the original design.
He requested a successive number of modifications, including the addition of Dwiggins-inspired serifs to the face to make it stand apart from similarly-weighted typefaces then on the market.
He wanted to imbue the face with a considerable amount of "old-timey" flavor in order to impart a sense of originality to the face and have it sell across both Modern and Bodoni/Didot market segments.
The final form of the face was a regulated and consistent balance of cartoonishness and earnest visual braggadocio, the bouncy, circus fairway-like swing of the original drawings of the letters taken down considerably and figures redrawn and redrawn for maximum readability.
The American Type Founders continued to produce the face and sell it at a decent pace, renaming it Cooper Modern.
The BB&S foundry closure resulted in the foundry equipment being shipped to New Jersey a few weeks shy of the typefaces completion. It is unfortunate, as the accompanying italic is perhaps Coopers masterpiece, a lively Bodoni-esque italic with more than a bit of influence from 19th Century display types, particularly in the treatment of the ball serifs on the uppercase A, J, M, and N.
Cooper Fullface Italic stands as the until-now missing bookend to Coopers career as a type designer.
Within is a typeface that spans the range of Coopers original drawings, utilizing a number of alternate characters.
The typeface includes the original ligatures, original Oz Cooper ornaments, fancy swash characters, and a range of punctuation and diacritics, et al, that fill out a full character set. The typefaces have been lovingly kerned for the smoothest result in text setting.
No comments:
Post a Comment