Covers for various clip books of line art issued in 1978 by Harry Volk Jr. Art Studio, Pleasantville, New Jersey. Each booklet features another face for the cover, typically in an attempt to echo the topic in the typeface choice, see e.g. the graphic Futura Black for “Graphic Arts”, the 19th-century Bracelet for “Western”, or the engraved Bond Shaded for “Money”. This volume uses Kabel Black for the bottom line, framing the logo designed by Herb Lubalin in 1976. The heavy border with rounded (and sometimes inset) corners was introduced in 1976, too, but wasn’t seen on most issues from 1977.
Good point! Here’s the Archie logo on issue no. 5 from November 1943. The similarity is mainly due to the contour around the letterforms, plus their general roundedness. It could very well be that the name is more than a coincidence. Archie (the typeface) had a contourless cousin named Super Cooper. That name was probably chosen in reference to the godfather of chubby faces, Cooper Black.
3 Comments on “Clip Books of Line Art, Volk (1978)”
Until I saw Archie in upper and lower case I didn’t notice its resemblance to… Archie comics.
Good point! Here’s the Archie logo on issue no. 5 from November 1943. The similarity is mainly due to the contour around the letterforms, plus their general roundedness. It could very well be that the name is more than a coincidence. Archie (the typeface) had a contourless cousin named Super Cooper. That name was probably chosen in reference to the godfather of chubby faces, Cooper Black.
Nolan Pelletier has drawn a decorative alphabet based on Green Buzzard:
https://www.instagram.com/p/CE7DMGmhD1L/