AM Augusta
Collection
Foundries
Designers
Year
Information
In Use
Augusta is an all-caps inline geometric typeface of rather complex construction. Each character has a solid and a shaded side, the latter consisting of a grid of thin parallel lines. It is a prime example of modernist type design, albeit with some letterforms with Art Nouveau traits (see for instance B, F and an alternate round E which can be activated via OpenType features); in fact, Art Nouveau types lasted much longer in Italy than elsewhere and they were still fashionable in the late 1930s. Augusta was a metal type produced by the Fonderia Tipografica Meridionale Armando De Luca (Naples), a family-run type foundry about which very little information is available. It was founded in 1896 and ceased activity in the 1970s or early 1980s, when the De Luca family switched to the manufacture of printing inks. Their greatest success seems to have been Napoli, a sanserif very similar to Schriftguss’s Super-Grotesk. [c-a-s-t.com]