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Road signs in Luxembourg Road signs in Romania Road signs in countries of the former Yugoslavia Road signs in Switzerland (until 2003) Standard (also known as Akzidenz-Grotesk) New York City subway signs: Sometimes seen on older New York City subway signs. Was sometimes used in place of Helvetica. [45] Tern: Road signs in Austria Road signs in ...
900 mm by 900 mm (36 in by 36 in) Road Closed Ahead sign, made to the specifications of the 2004 edition of Standard Highway Signs (sign W20-3). Uses the Roadgeek 2005 fonts archive copy at the Wayback Machine. (United States law does not permit the copyrighting of typeface designs, and the fonts are meant to be copies of a U.S. Government ...
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Tratex (earlier called GePos) is a geometric sans-serif typeface family for road signs in Sweden. It was developed for maximal readability in traffic, and designed by Karl-Gustaf Gustafsson (known as Kåge Gustafsson). [1] Since 2014, Tratex has also been used on road signs in the Swedish-speaking autonomous region of Åland in Finland. [2]
A highway sign using Clearview in Farmington Hills, Michigan, near the terminus of westbound I-696 (2005). The standard FHWA typefaces, developed in the 1940s, were designed to work with a system of highway signs in which almost all words are capitalized; its standard mixed-case form (Series E Modified) was designed to be most visible under the now-obsolete reflector system of button copy ...
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A road sign written mainly in Transport Heavy; the white on blue text is Transport Medium. Transport is a sans serif typeface first designed for road signs in the United Kingdom. It was created between 1957 and 1963 by Jock Kinneir and Margaret Calvert as part of their work as designers for the Department of Transport's Anderson and Worboys ...