https://www.myfonts.com/fonts/filmotype/filmotype-maxwell/
It’s Filmotype Maxwell! a bouncy interlocking serif originally released as a Free Style typeface by Filmotype in the early 1960s that captures the essence of the mod design movement.
Filmotype Ford Font
Initially designed in the early-to-mid 1950s and likely inspired by the styles made popular by Lettering, Inc, Filmotype Ford solves the needs of customers looking for a more heavy duty sans serif style with a 1940s sensibility. Even with its ultra wide characters, Filmotype Ford retains its legibility at a variety of sizes.
https://www.youworkforthem.com/font/T4308/filmotype-keynote
Introduced by Filmotype in 1955, Filmotype Keynote was inspired by bold advertisers handlettering styles made popular in the late 1930s through the early 1940s. Remastered and expanded with exacting precision from the original filmstrips, Filmotype Keynote includes a full international character compliment, automatic fractionals, ordinals, and a suite of alternates in dynamic OpenType format for a smooth connecting look.
https://www.marksimonson.com/fonts/view/filmotype-gem
Filmotype Gem (2011, for Filmotype) was originally designed and released in the 1950s. It is an “all caps” design. Filmotype Gem is part of a range of compact sans serif fonts whose names begin with the letter “G” (a Filmotype convention) that have much in common with Futura—the one-story a, the round dots, the simplified t and u. If there were such a thing as Futura Compressed, it would look a lot like this. Gem has its own unique characteristics, such as the prominent whiplash spine on the S and its subtle hand-lettered feel.
- This Free Style typeface owes its origins to Lettering Inc where its original author penned a similar style prior to creating a unique version of the typeface for Filmotype in the early 1950s.
- Filmotype MacBeth was remastered and expanded with exacting precision and includes a full international character compliment, automatic fractionals, ordinals, and a complete suite of alternate characters in dynamic OpenType format.
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/filmotype/havana/
Filmotype Havana was among the company’s earliest connecting brush-lettered casuals and was introduced by Filmotype in 1955 as a smoother, condensed weight of its popular cousin Horizon. Filmotype Havana was developed from the original font filmstrips and includes a full international character complement, automatic fractionals, ordinals, and a wonderful assortment of alternate characters and ligatures to create a genuine connecting hand-painted look in dynamic OpenType format.
OTF | 1 Font | JPG Preview | 1 Mb RAR
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/filmotype/filmotype-leader/
Introduced by Filmotype in the early 1950s, Filmotype Leader was inspired by speedy sho-card bold lettering styles prominently featured in automotive advertising and editorial designs of the late 1940s and early 1950s to express speed and urgency. Remastered and expanded with exacting precision from the original filmstrips, Filmotype Leader includes a full international character compliment, automatic fractionals, ordinals, and a suite of alternates in dynamic OpenType format for a smooth connecting look.
OTF | 1 Font | JPG Preview | 1 Mb RAR
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/filmotype/jade/
Filmotype Jade is unique as one of a few bold condensed upright scripts in its library with its smooth flowing handwritten style originally released by Filmotype in 1955 to expand its Scripts category. Filmotype Jade was developed from the original font filmstrips and includes a full international character compliment, automatic fractionals, ordinals, and a very large set of alternate contextual characters and ligatures to allow flawless typesetting in dynamic OpenType format.
OTF | 1 Font | JPG Preview | 1 Mb RAR
http://www.myfonts.com/fonts/filmotype/lucky/
Among the early collection of handwritten script fonts offered by Filmotype in the beginning of the 1950s, the monoline script Filmotype Lucky was originally penned by Ray Baker in the early 1950s. Remastered and expanded with exacting precision from the original filmstrips, Filmotype Lucky includes a full international character compliment, automatic fractionals, ordinals, and a suite of alternates in dynamic OpenType format for a smooth connecting look.
OTF | 1 Font | JPG Preview | 1 Mb RAR