A treasure trove of Japanese ’60s graphic design, as captivating now as it was then.

After World War II, alphabet typography became an everyday part of life in Japan as printed materials, notices, and signs in foreign languages, particularly English, flooded streets and homes alike. With their well-defined forms, rhythmical lines, and variously delicate, dignified, or fanciful air, these letters and symbols not only brilliantly satisfied their original design purpose, but are delightful to look at even today.
This volume, a reedited reprint of a collection originally published in 1962, brings together the best of alphabet typography from ’60s Japan, including some seventy letter and number fonts both practical and ornamental along with roughly a thousand monograms combining letters and numerals in a variety of forms.
□ size: 148 × 105 × 24 mm, 210 g
□ binding: softcover
□ pages: 276

Jean-Jacques a dit - Angèle Douche
Distant Egghug - Peter McDonald
Paris la Consciencieuse : Paris la Guideuse du monde - Frédéric Bruly Bouabré
L'eau jusqu'au nombril - Lilian Froger
Pour voir, Emscher Park - Gaëtane Lamarche-Vadel
Idoine & Antonin Giroud-Delorme
MAN - Erik Kessels, Karel De Mulder
Les Grands Ensembles - Léo Guy-Denarcy
Saint Julien l'hospitalier Tome 1 - Claire Pedot
本の本の本 - antoine lefebvre editions,
Tarwar - Ilan Manouach
La grande surface de réparation - Gilles Pourtier
Rasclose - Geoffroy Mathieu
Sakae Osugi – Anarchiste japonais – Ville de St-Denis 1923 - Katja Stuke, Oliver Sieber
Tanière de lune - Maria-Mercé Marçal
Poétique d'une introspection visuelle - Jean-Charles Andrieu de Levis, Alex Barbier
IBM – Graphic Design Guide from 1969 to 1987 



















