Bank Gothic is a rectilinear geometric sans-serif typeface designed by Morris Fuller Benton for American Type Founders and released from 1930. The design has become popular from the late twentieth century to suggest a science-fiction, military, corporate or sports aesthetic. Bank Gothic is an exploration of geometric forms, and is contemporary with the rectilinear slab seriftypefaceCity by Georg Trump. The typeface also bears comparison with late-nineteenth-century engraving faces such as Copperplate Gothic, which were popular for business card and corporate stationery printing. The design was initially issued in small print sizes to allow this use.
Metal type
The original metal typeface was capitals-only in light, medium and bold in regular and condensed widths, with larger sizes released as Poster Gothic. According to McGrew, the range of sizes cast allowed smaller sizes to be used as small capitals for larger sizes. It became a standard design, with Monotype, Linotype, Ludlow and Intertype offering versions. When Linotype issued a digitization in the 1980s small caps were added in the lower-case position, and this has become common in digital releases.
Digitizations
As American Type Founders ceased operations before issuing a digital version, various digitizations have been released by different companies, including Bitstream, ParaType and others.
In 2010, FontHaus released an updated revival of the original Bank Gothic complete with a lowercase and small caps and a new suite of punctuation glyphs. The family consists of Light, Medium and Bold weights in both a regular and a condensed style. The new lowercase characters did not exist with the original release and were modeled after many similar Morris Fuller Benton designs released by American Type Founders in the 1930s.
DeLuxe Gothic
In 2003, letterforms artist began work on DeLuxe Gothic—a derivative version of American Type Founder's Bank Gothic. Unlike the 1930s original, Doret’s font contains lowercase characters. The DeLuxe Gothic Family was released in OpenType format in 2010 by Alphabet Soup Type Founders with both regular and condensed styles as well as traditional shortcaps. DeLuxe Gothic was the name originally used by the Intertype Corporation for its version of Morris Fuller Benton's Bank Gothic. Prior to its September 8, 2010 release, it was known as Bank Gothic AS.
Morris Sans
Designed by Dan Reynolds for Linotype, Morris Sans is an extended Bank Gothic family including both lowercase letters and small capitals. The design has 3 weights in regular and condensed widths, and modern OpenType features.
Others
designed two typefaces which are based on the Bank Gothic typeface, Bank Sans EF and Bank Sans Caps EF. Both typefaces had 64 weights with italics and support Cyrillic. MADType designed the Aldrich typeface, which also based on the Bank Gothic typeface.