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by PaulHoule
1712 days ago
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It is not just the font it is how you use it. Out of the box in PowerPoint or Illustrator, you will struggle to set large characters in print unless you manually change character spacing. I look at the movie titles and think there are mistakes in the spacing and wonder what kind of machine they used to make it. All the above software is supposed to have automated ‘Kerninq’ of characters but it does not work well enough. If serif spacing is tight, the letters link together like cursive or Arabic calligraphy and form a meaningful composition. The default rules, however, avoid serifs crashing into each other at all costs, space letters too far apart, and create meaningless white spaces. |
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They were probably done by hand, especially given the swapping of characters from different fonts.
I've forgotten the name of the company [flir reminds me in the comment below that it was Letraset], but it was common back then (yes, I'm an old fart, though was a kid when that film came out) to have a transparent sheet with adhesive vinyl (? or some other polymer) letters you could transfer over one by one to your workpiece. If you went into a an art supply house there would be racks of these things sorted by font and then size, down at least to 8 point.
Back in 1968 phototypesetting was not super common. It was probably used for some of the larger blocks (like the toilet instructions) although just as likely to have been done with hot lead which survived almost to the end of the 1970s.
It's hard to remember now (this mostly predated my working time since I started with laser printing in the 70s) but medium and large companies often had a lot of paper and data management departments with things like typing pools (completely retyping documents in order to incorporate edits was the state of the art) and print shops (photocopiers were expensive and uncommon into the 70s)