Pular para o conteúdo
Pular para o conteúdo principal

1791 Constitution

por GLC
Estilos Individuais a partir de $42.00 USD
A família de fontes 1791 Constitution foi desenhada por Gilles Le Corre e publicada pela GLC. 1791 Constitution contém 1 estilos.

Saiba mais sobre esta família

Sobre a família


In the year 1791, the 20th of June, the king of France Louis XVI attempted to flight from Paris to the Luxembourg. He was intercepted on the road and taked to Paris again on the 21st. A few month later, in September, the first French democratic constitution was promulgated, transferring the sovereignty from the king to the French people. This font was created inspired from the steady hand of a lawyer writing a farm renting contract a few days after the advent of the new French regime. It is a "Pro" font containing Western (including Celtic) and Northern European, Icelandic, Baltic, Eastern, Central European and Turquish diacritics. The numerous alternates and ligatures allow to made the font looking as closely as possible to a real hand. Using an OTF software, the features allow to vary the characters without anything to do but to select contextual alternates and standard ligatures and/or stylistic alternates options.

Designers: Gilles Le Corre

Publicador: GLC

Fundidoras: GLC

Proprietário do design: GLC

Estreia na MyFonts: Jul 22, 2011

1791 Constitution

Sobre GLC

Gilles Le Corre was born in 1950 in Nantes, France. Painter since the end of 70s, he is also an engraver and calligrapher. He has been learning about medieval art and old books for as long as he can remember. More recently he has made the computer a tool for writing like the quill pen and ink. With it, he aims to make it possible to print books that look just like old ones! Beginning in 2007 he has been trying to reproduce, very exactly, a wide range of historic European typefaces, mainly from medieval and early periods of printing - his favorite period - from 1456 with Gutenberg, up to 1913 with a font inspired by a real old typewriter.

Ler mais

Ler menos