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Distressed: Photocopied/Misprinted/Aged

Noah Nazir
D
Last edited September 18, 2018

It’s often best to apply your own effects to make type appear authentically aged, but sometimes a distressed typeface is the easiest and most prudent solution. Here are fonts that emulate the damaged, weathered, antiqued, worn, or corroded ink of photocopied or misprinted type on the page.



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vortex
bureaucratic
Funny is an attitude

The Handel Gothic™ typeface has been a mainstay of graphic communication for over 40 years - all the while looking as current as tomorrow. Designed by Don Handel in the mid-1960s, and used in the 1973 United Airlines logo developed by Saul Bass, Handel Gothic was an instant success when released to the graphic design community. Its generous lowercase x-height, full-bodied counters and square... Read More

safety
microphysics
Throw mischievous cook the sauce

Yanek Iontef loves the printing on cardboard packaging. For years, he collected empty cardboard boxes that once carried imported goods. His studio soon looked like a warehouse. To regain ground, he began transforming the visual language of the boxes into a font with universal appeal. Then, he donated the whole of his cardboard collection to a local recycling facility. There are two FF... Read More

brandy
abstractions
Take luggage of foreigner no charge

Just as popular as the digital typewriter face FF Trixie are those in the FF Instant Types series: FF Confidential, FF Dynamoe, FF Flightcase, FF Karton, and FF Stamp Gothic. Named after the places each comes from, these fonts feature familiar character sets from everyday letters and figures all around us: packaging, flight cases, children’s stamp boxes, Dymo tape labelers. We see them every... Read More

winter
wunderkinder
Do not joke for the bathroom

FF Blur is from FontFont’s earliest period, made in 1991 by British designer Neville Brody. The typeface was developed by blurring a grayscale image of an existing grotesque and then vectorizing what remained. Though deceptively simple, his process was imitated widely afterward, with mediocre results. Notwithstanding the knock-offs, FF Blur entered the zeitgeist of early and mid-1990s design,... Read More

vortex
illustrative
Entering shop by stroller you decline

Just as popular as the digital typewriter face FF Trixie are those in the FF Instant Types series: FF Confidential, FF Dynamoe, FF Flightcase, FF Karton, and FF Stamp Gothic. Named after the places each comes from, these fonts feature familiar character sets from everyday letters and figures all around us: packaging, flight cases, children’s stamp boxes, Dymo tape labelers. We see them every... Read More

safety
illustrative
Braise in soy, burnt sneak away

According to its designer, John Critchley, FF Bull is an authentic reproduction of old John Bull rubber stamp type sets, inked to varying amounts to produce six discrete weights. Each is fully interchangeable and can be combined or overlaid to provide additional variety. Certain of the weights contain special “dirt-keys,” which can be used to customize a piece of design even further.

Donald Handel, Nadine Chahine and Rod McDonald
ITC 2010
Eduardo Manso
Bitstream 1997
Yanek Iontef
FontFont 2003
Just van Rossum
FontFont 1992
John Roshell
Comicraft 2010
Neville Brody
FontFont 1991
Just van Rossum
FontFont 1992
John Critchley
FontFont 1995