Arb 187 Moderne Caps Aug 47 Cas Normal|
by The Fontry

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Nec luisse pudet, sed non incidere ludum.
horace
Arb 187 Moderne Caps Aug 47 Cas Normal
He's long ago given up hope of finding a country anywhere in the world where it was safe to tell total strangers that he had no interest in sports whatsoever.
greg egan
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z
Arb 187 Moderne Caps Aug 47 Cas Normal
Arb 187 Moderne Caps Aug 47 Cas Normal

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Sport is linked with the technical world because sport itself is a technique. The enormous contrast between the athletes of Greece and those of Rome is well known. For the Greeks, physical exercise was an ethic for developing freely and harmoniously the form and strength of the human body. For the Romans, it was a technique for increasing the legionnaire's efficiency. The Roman conception prevails today.
jacques ellul
The quick brown fox
Jumps over the lazy dog
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Loyalty to any one sports team is pretty hard to justify, because the players are always changing, the team can move to another city. You're actually rooting for the clothes, when you get right down to it. You know what I mean? You are standing and cheering and yelling for your clothes to beat the clothes from another city. Fans will be so in love with a player, but if he goes to another team, they boo him. This is the same human being in a different shirt; they hate him now. Boo! Different shirt! Boo!
jerry seinfeld
display Basic Serif arb-187 moderne caps aug-47 normal Fontry alfbecker artdeco poster signs vintage book classical old
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INFO

Beginning in January, 1932, Alf R. Becker of St. Louis Missouri, at the request of then-editor E. Thomas Kelly, supplied SIGNS of the Times magazine’s new Art and Design section with an alphabet a month, a project initially predicted to last only two years. Misjudging the popularity of the “series”, it instead ran for 27 years, ending finally two months before Becker’s death in 1959, for a grand total of 320 alphabets, a nearly perfect, uninterrupted run. In late 1941, just ten years after the first alphabet was published, 100 of those alphabets were compiled and published in book form under the title, 100 Alphabets, by Alf R. Becker. And so, as published in August, 1937, The Fontry presents a limited version of Becker's 187th alphabet, Moderne Caps.

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