This entry combines two similar typefaces from the phototype
era, Village and Orbit.
Village appears in PLINC’s
Psychedelitypes (1968) as Pyschedelitype
5788/5789 and, with more widths and shadow variants in
Alphabet
Yearbook 1969. Shown in Alphabet Thesaurus,
Vol. 3 and One Line (1971) as Village, in
9 variations: 5783/V. East (open shade right),
5784/Other V. (shade right), 5785/V. Stocked (contour),
5786/V. Mainliner
(double outline), 5787/V. Gate (outline),
5789/V. Narrow,
5790/V. Wide,
5792/V. West (open
shade left), 5793/V. Chicurel (shade left).
Orbit is a common variation with no flaring, and a
vertical-legged ‘R’ and tailed ‘T’ (these may have been alternates
in Village). The origin of Orbit is
uncertain, but it appears in a
Letterphot Vario ad (1971), Mecanorma More…
This entry combines two similar typefaces from the phototype era, Village and Orbit.
Village appears in PLINC’s Psychedelitypes (1968) as Pyschedelitype 5788/5789 and, with more widths and shadow variants in Alphabet Yearbook 1969. Shown in Alphabet Thesaurus, Vol. 3 and One Line (1971) as Village, in 9 variations: 5783/V. East (open shade right), 5784/Other V. (shade right), 5785/V. Stocked (contour), 5786/V. Mainliner (double outline), 5787/V. Gate (outline), 5789/V. Narrow, 5790/V. Wide, 5792/V. West (open shade left), 5793/V. Chicurel (shade left).
Orbit is a common variation with no flaring, and a vertical-legged ‘R’ and tailed ‘T’ (these may have been alternates in Village). The origin of Orbit is uncertain, but it appears in a Letterphot Vario ad (1971), Mecanorma (1973), Berthold’s E1 (1974, with Facsimile Fonts credits), Lettergraphics (1976, but not 1968/1969), Haber (1981), and Solotype’s Art Deco Display Alphabets (1982). A variant with filled-in bottom apertures (‘AHKMNRWX’) is shown in catalogs by Formatt (1974, Orbit with O. Rimmed and O. Shaded) and Hollenstein (1974, as Foto Orbit Solid).
Orbit was digitized by Dick Pape as DXS Orbit (2010). Humberto Gillan made a freebie digitization based on Village (but without the flaring), and included Orbit’s ‘R’ and ‘T’ as alternates (OutsideInside Fonts, 2017).