MyFonts Home
“Need a scissors symbol? Type scissors!”
 
Cart
HomeFind FontsWhatTheFontCDsSpecialsStarletsMy AccountHelp
Font Family Tree
<< previous | next >> | font index

Gator™

A font family tree displays different foundries’ versions, or a foundry’s different cuts, of basically the same typeface design.

Gator Any OpenType FeaturesBasic Latin/English lettersWest European diacriticsEuroLigaturesCentral EuropeBalticTurkishRomanianOpenType Alternates
Canada Type Font Family — 1 style — from $14.95
Preview Image

Gator

Some words from Canada Type:

Cooper Black's second coming to American design in the mid-sixties, after almost four decades of slumber, can arguably be credited with (or, depending on design ideology, blamed for) the domino effect that triggered the whole art nouveau pop poster jam of the 1960s and 1970s. By the early 1970s, though Cooper Black still held its popular status (and, for better or for worse, still does), countless so-called hippie and funk faces were competing for packaging and paper space. The American evolution of the genre would trip deeper into psychedelia, drawing on a rich history of flared, flourished and rounded design until it all dwindled and came to a halt a few years into the 1980s. But the European (particularly German) response to that whole display type trend remained for the most part cool and reserved, drawing more on traditional art nouveau and art deco sources rather than the bottomless jug of new ideas being poured on the other side of the pond. One of the humorous responses to the “hamburgering” of typography was Friedrich Poppl’s Poppl Heavy, done in 1972, when Cooper Black was celebrating its 50th anniversary. It is presented here in a fresh digitization under the name Gator (a tongue-in-cheek reference to Ray Kroc, the father of the fast food chain).

To borrow the title of a classic rock album, Gator is meaty, beaty, big and bouncy. It is one of the finest examples of how expressively animated a thick brush can be, and one of the better substitutes to the much overused Cooper Black.

Gator comes in all popular font formats, and sports an extended character set covering the majority of Latin-based languages. Many alternates and ligatures are included in the font.



About UsTestimonialsSell Your FontsBecome an AffiliateSite MapSign In

MyFonts   245 First Street   17th Floor   Cambridge MA 02142   USA
MyFonts and MyFonts.com are registered trademarks of Bitstream, Inc.
WhatTheFont and Starlets are trademarks of Bitstream, Inc.
Copyright © 1999–2008 Bitstream, Inc. PRIVACY POLICY

Shady characters should send email to gibbs@myfonts.com. Thanks to typography.com for the idea.