Members Grey Drakkon Posted January 27, 2016 Members Report Posted January 27, 2016 I have a customer who brought in a bunch of stuff to get framed (my day job) and one of those things is a leather name badge from their father's WWII uniform. The thing is, they're doing multiple frames and don't have enough of them for everyone, so they were hoping to get some duplicated. Does anyone recognize the font used for the lettering? You can see that it was done by hand with a single stamp at a time. The R's in particular are quite distinctive, and the center of the E is as well. Any help would be greatly appreciated! Quote
King's X Posted January 27, 2016 Report Posted January 27, 2016 Not Times Roman? It looks like typewriter font. Quote
Members Grey Drakkon Posted January 27, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 27, 2016 It's likely a typewriter variant, but I'm hoping for the EXACT font/tools used. Nothing I've found so far gets it quite right, the E especially. Quote
Members Studio-N Posted January 27, 2016 Members Report Posted January 27, 2016 they are only 1/8" tall. they could be a machinist punch set. Quote
Members Grey Drakkon Posted January 28, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 28, 2016 ...They're 1/4". My bad for not lining it up on the proper spot. Quote
Members SmokeyPoint Posted January 28, 2016 Members Report Posted January 28, 2016 I think you're looking for something like this: http://www.ebay.com/itm/us-military-letter-number-brass-punch-set-marking-outfit-leather-stamp-tools-/251232715354 Although that set looks to be italicized - and sold. Quote
stelmackr Posted January 28, 2016 Report Posted January 28, 2016 Could try the following: https://www.myfonts.com/WhatTheFont/ http://www.fontspring.com/matcherator http://www.identifont.com/ http://www.fonts.com/id/by-sight http://www.digitalscrapper.com/blog/identify-font/ http://www.vandelaydesign.com/font-identifier-tools/ ...but I don't know if it help you find the tools. It would help you identify a font that may be able to find a letterpress metal type set that could be used to to impress into leather. Examples can be seen here: http://aaleatherbigbookcovers.com/download/Typography%20in%20Leather%20Article.pdf Hope this helps. Bob Stelmack Quote
stelmackr Posted January 28, 2016 Report Posted January 28, 2016 Used one of those font searching tools and came up with this: Bob Stelmack Quote
Members Grey Drakkon Posted January 29, 2016 Author Members Report Posted January 29, 2016 Thanks for the help, everyone. Looks like they're willing to settle for a different size and look after all. I'll be keeping an eye out from now on though because some of those kits look neat. Quote
Members ConradPark Posted February 4, 2016 Members Report Posted February 4, 2016 An alternative would be to take a high resolution picture that is taken straight from the top, trace the outlines and vectorize them in Illustrator or similar software and then have a debossing stamp made from the pattern. That way you would get a exact duplicate. A white metal plate shouldn't cost you much more than 20-30 dollars for that size, maybe even less. Quote
stelmackr Posted March 16, 2021 Report Posted March 16, 2021 Corrected link to article. Had some issues with internet. That article on Tutorial--Typography in Leather has been moved to: https://drive.google.com/file/d/1qgV6aH_FkHa5lBX_kNceroW2elQju_XW/view Quote
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