![Cyanotype](https://blogfonts.com/fonts/c/427/7427/img/scyanotype-0.png)
![Cyanotype](https://blogfonts.com/fonts/c/427/7427/img/scyanotype-1.png)
![Cyanotype](https://blogfonts.com/fonts/c/427/7427/img/scyanotype-2.png)
![Cyanotype](https://blogfonts.com/fonts/c/427/7427/img/scyanotype-3.png)
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141 characters
![Cyanotype](images/loading.gif)
![Cyanotype](images/loading.gif)
![Cyanotype](images/loading.gif)
![Cyanotype](images/loading.gif)
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Extended information
Architects and engineers use a particular, very regimented script for formal drawings. This is for legibility purposes and is known as Draftsman's Hand, Engineer's Hand, or Architect's Hand. The same script is often used in pre-1950's book illustrations, when they were all done by hand. This font attempts to replicate one such example, from a set of blueprints (or cyanotypes) made by the British War Office during World War I. The letter sizes are a bit irregular, but this font is still an excellent choice to label diagrams and technical blueprints for that hand-drawn, 1950's look.
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