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#Caslon egyptian font free download plus#
Includes a selection of authentic arrows and manicules, plus abbreviated ligatures such as ‘St.’ (Saint or Street) ‘Rd.’ (Road) and ‘Jn.’ (Junction). It has been designed for fun and doesnt claim. The design is based on the type specimen found in the Blake, Garnett & Co. ‘Two Lines English Egyptian’, as it was called, was caps-only, and there are several other correlations between that type design and this one. English Egyptian is an interpretation of Two Lines English Egyptian originally created by the Caslon Foundry of Salisbury Square, London, in around 1816. William Caslon IV is credited with the first Latin sans-serif type, shown in a 1816 Caslon specimen book. As well identifying platforms, they were used on the front of the steam engine’s smokebox, hence the name, and stylistically are more in keeping with the letters than some of the squarer versions that can be seen in old photographs. The design of the numbers differed considerably, but here have been taken from the Device 112 Hours font Smokebox. The Bluebell Railway, a heritage steam line, runs over part of the old Southern Railway network and uses a very similar type. Being hand-made, the letters often differ in width and thickness. The rarest letters were the Q, seen in Queens Road Battersea, the X, seen in East Brixton, and the Z, used in Maze Hill, site of an infamous train crash in 1958. Reference for each letter was taken from vintage ‘target’ station nameplates and other platform signage.
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The same design was also used for the ‘hawkeye’ signs on the London, Midland and Scottish Railway, differentiated by black letters on a yellow background. In existence from 1923 to 1948, when the network was nationalised, the Southern Railway linked London with the Channel ports, South West England, the South coast resorts and Kent. Smart, legible and elegant, Gravesend Sans is a based on the unique typeface used for the iconic grass-green signage for the Southern Railway. Gravesend Sans contains 6 styles and family package options. Gravesend Sans was designed by Rian Hughes and published by Device.