Atlantica is a contemporary cursive brushscript typeface family designed by Pellisco with Cosimo Lorenzo Pancini for Zetafonts.
It comes in three variants. Atlantica Signature offers all the original letters designed by Pellisco with alternates avalaible as glyphs: it's mostly suited for display use. For text usage, Atlantica Text offers better readability by adopting a more restrained lowercase t and giving some small adjustments to the typeface. Finally, Atlantica Display offers a flamboyant logo typeface version, with multiple automatic ligatures making extreme use of open type substitutions, to transform every text in a lettering work of art.
Atlantica is the third typeface in our Signature series, offering typefaces handmade by world-famous lettering artists, designers and illustrators.
Writing system:
Language Supported:
European languages
The European languages are members of the same family. Their separate existence is a myth. For science, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocabulary.
The languages only differ in their grammar, their pronunciation and their most common words. Everyone realizes why a new common language would be desirable: one could refuse to pay expensive translators. To achieve this, it would be necessary to have uniform grammar, pronunciation and more common words. If several languages coalesce, the grammar of the resulting language is more simple and regular than that of the individual languages. The new common language will be more simple and regular than the existing European languages. It will be as simple as Occidental; in fact, it will be Occidental. To an English person, it will seem like simplified English, as a skeptical Cambridge friend of mine told me what Occidental is. The European languages are members of the same family. Their separate existence is a myth. For science, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocabulary. The languages only differ in their grammar, their pronunciation and their most common words. Everyone realizes why a new common language would be desirable: one could refuse to pay expensive translators. To achieve this, it would be necessary to have uniform grammar, pronunciation and more common words. If several languages coalesce, the grammar of the resulting language is more simple and regular than that of the individual languages. The new common language will be more simple and regular than the existing European languages. It will be as simple as Occidental; in fact, it will be Occidental. To an English person, it will seem like simplified English, as a skeptical Cambridge friend of mine told me what Occidental is. The European languages are members of the same family. Their separate existence is a myth. For science, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocabulary.