Typography from Alföld Magazine

Eugene Tantsurin

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5 minute read

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Vintage Typography from Alföld Magazine

Last year, we came across a copy of Alföld magazine, printed in the city of Subotica, Serbia, in 1936. There are a few fascinating things about it, from the fact that it was found in my father's house attic to the fact that it has a whole spread on the latest Hindenburg zeppelin — before its crash a year later.

Above all, the vintage typography and fonts were fascinating. It was right around the time when type became cheap and affordable, so magazine pages became battlefields on which local businesses competed for the readers' attention using, well, nothing more and nothing less than fonts. Something is endearing about pre-war vintage typography, especially in publications that weren't large or international. Local businesses are on one page, and your usual snake oil salesmen are on the next. Throw in all sorts of ornamental borders, vignettes, worn-off typefaces, and wonky layouts — and you get the typographic experience of Alföld. 

Here are a few spreads from the magazine that best describe the time's typographic mood. Mind you, despite its versatility, it's a relatively small magazine printed in a town with a population of around 50,000 in 1936. We cherish this curious find at the studio and hope for opportunities to work on revival versions of some of these vintage fonts in the future.


Spread of vintage magazine Alfold, showcasing vintage fonts and typefaces

↑ Alföld, June 1936
↗ Ad for Centralna Knjižara (Central Bookstore)


Vintage fonts used in Ads from Alfold magazine printed in Subotica

↑ Advertising spreads from Alföld magazine


Typography inspiration from Alfold magazine, brought by Groteskly Yours Studio

↑ News story with photographs
↗ Advertising spread from Alföld magazine


Ads with vintage type layout from Alfold magazine

↑ Ad for Centralna Knjižara (Central Bookstore)


Clippings with vintage fonts from Alfold magazine, brought by Groteskly Yours Studio

↑ Selection of Ads and Letterings

We, however, are more excited about the versatility of vintage fonts found in Alföld. This selection of clippings above has it all: commercial fonts, hand painted letterings, idiosyncratic typesetting and unique layouts. We hope to be able to draw from these references in the future and add a couple of Alföld-inspired typefaces to our type library.

UPD 2026: Some of the fonts found in the issue were used as inspiration for the Alfold type family, released in 2026.

Mentioned fonts

About the author

Eugene Tantsurin from Groteskly Yours Studio

Eugene is a Belgrade-based type designer. He developed an interest in type design after graduating from Bangkok University with a degree in Communication Arts in 2018. At GYS, he leads all type-related projects.

Eugene Tantsurin from Groteskly Yours Studio

Eugene is a Belgrade-based type designer. He developed an interest in type design after graduating from Bangkok University with a degree in Communication Arts in 2018. At GYS, he leads all type-related projects.