Explore the beauty and versatility of Cooper Black fonts. Enhance your designs and captivate your audience with the classic charm of Cooper Black typography.
If the walls of the Roundhouse could talk, the anecdotes would be immense. The iconic London venue is where Andy Warhol performed his only play, where the world’s biggest bouncy castle was inflated indoors, where Antony Gormley’s ominous _You_ figure stands surveying Camden’s crowds from the roof, and LSD-fuelled naked theatre was once a thing.
Where’s Waldo? More like where’s Cooper Black? The font is everywhere! The Visual History of Cooper Black infographic was created by fibers.com to show their love for Cooper Black. You might not know it, but you’ve seen Cooper Black. On the shop-front, in naughty magazines
CA Winner: @SharpTypeCo’s font Doyle synthesizes elements of two iconic fonts—Cooper Black and ITC American Typewriter—to create a wholly distinct family. #winner #communicationarts #typography
Inspired by the more than hundred years old classic Cooper Black, Chunk Black features a hefty character with rounded serifs and a soft yet sturdy overall appearance. Chunk Black provides a timeless and friendly feel and it’s very suitable for product and packaging design and any kind of display purposes from music business to restaurant menus and from t-shirts to band logos. #ad
Cooper Black, the most famous and successful of Oswald Cooper’s type designs, was released in 1920, following a year of development fleshing out the weight of the typeface and filling out the full character set. Cooper redrew the lowercase characters multiple times, toying with the rounded forms of the “m” and “n” and engaged in a lively debate with Richard N. McArthur of Barnhart Brohers & Spindler over the final form as McArthur requested that the typeface be drawn bolder and bolder…