Victorian typeface

Discover Pinterest’s best ideas and inspiration for Victorian typeface. Get inspired and try out new things.
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The “Bull Stand Victorian” typeface is a distinctive and ornate font that exudes the elegance and intricacy of the Victorian era. This font is a testament to the attention to detail and craftsmanship that characterized the design aesthetics of that period. The typeface draws inspiration from the decorative elements and elaborate typography that were prevalent during the 19th century. Victorian Alphabet Letters, Victorian Font Typography, Gothic Design Elements, Victorian Fonts Alphabet, Victorian Lettering Alphabet, Typo Design Typography, Old Fonts Vintage, Vintage Typography Alphabet, Vintage Lettering Alphabet

The “Bull Stand Victorian” typeface is a distinctive and ornate font that exudes the elegance and intricacy of the Victorian era. This font is a testament to the attention to detail and craftsmanship that characterized the design aesthetics of that period. The typeface draws inspiration from the decorative elements and elaborate typography that were prevalent during the 19th century.

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The Morshine Free – Visuely

Morshine is a typeface which is inspired by vintage lettering sign and art. While this font has a victorian touch, it still looks bold and solid. Very suitable for for headline, logotype, apparel, invitation, branding, packaging, advertising etc with old school / vintage theme. This typeface looks great combined with decorative ornaments. It comes in uppercase, lowercase, punctuations, symbols & numerals, stylistic set alternate, ligatures, etc also support multilingual and already PUA…

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Clever Typography, Numbers Tattoo, Calligraphy Designs, 10 Tattoo, Design Alphabet, Vintage Logos, Illustration Typography, Logos Ideas, Sign Painting

I once found a set of Speedball pen nibs as a kid. I was familiar with conventional pen and ink usage, but had never seen nibs like this before. It wasn’t until taking a calligraphy course in college (with Professor Don Anderson, author of “The Art Of Written Forms”) that I ran across them again and had a chance to try them out. The times have evolved a lot since then and so much of the calligraphic art is becoming lost to digital convenience, but leafing through some vintage

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