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

Rue Englelab, La révolution par les livres - Iran 1979 - 1983 - Hannah Darabi
9 octobre 1977 - Roberto Varlez
Paris la Consciencieuse : Paris la Guideuse du monde - Frédéric Bruly Bouabré
Dessins pour Rugir - Virginie Rochetti
Débris N°2 - Théo Garnier Greuez
Fièvre - Ronan Bouroullec
Heads Together – Weed and the Underground Press Syndicate - David Jacob Kramer
Zoom Age - Julien Auregan
Hobo Nickel - Damien Sauvage
Slow Down Abstractions - Adrien Vescovi
Screen Printing Basics - ottoGraphics
Strates - Else Bedoux
HARTES BROT - Moritz Schermbach
[piʃaˈsɐ̃w̃] - antoine lefebvre editions, 



















