ITC CuppaJoe supports up to 50 different languages such as Spanish, English, Portuguese, German, French, Italian, Dutch, Swedish, Finnish, Danish, Irish, Basque, Icelandic, and Luxembourgian in Latin and other scripts.
Please note that not all languages are available for all formats.
Nick Curtis¿s love affair with typography began when he was barely past adolescence, in a neighborhood alley of East Dallas. On a routine patrol for tossed treasures, he came across a type specimen catalog: a big, fat green binder displaying hundreds of fonts! He was hooked. Curtis¿s career has taken him from production art to graphic design to art direction, but type has always remained his graphic passion, especially the provocative designs produced from the late 19th through the early 20th centuries.Curtis¿s inspiration for ITC CuppaJoe comes from Art Deco lettering, but not from the typical sources. Depending upon your age¿or your interest in early twentieth-century package design¿ITC CuppaJoe might look familiar. Its foundation is the label art for Bokar, A&P¿s premium coffee during the 1930s. Curtis built on the gently sweeping curves and bold angular strokes of the original coffee-can lettering to create a distinctive typeface that commands attention. Rich, full-bodied, satisfying¿now that¿s a ITC CuppaJoe!