Jezebel was designed by Rebecca Alaccari and published by Canada Type. Jezebel contains 5 styles and family package options.
Jezebel is all dressed up for you. And if she can’t make your mouth water and eyes light up with love, nobody else can. She’s got bigger hair than Dolly and Elvira together, more tongue than a Kiss concert with Jagger opening, more leg than a Moulin Rouge premiere, more sword than a pirate ship, and more loop than a chartered accountant. She’s the queen of now, the essence of cool, the twenty-first century fox. She’s the ever playful and creative girl with so much talent her art just cannot be restrained. She’s got popular culture on a long but strong leash. She looks gorgeous and positively glamorous no matter what color she wears. And last but not least, she’s got the charisma to make people of all ages want more of whatever it is she feels like offering.
The Jezebel design was extrapolated from two early 70s film ideas called Hampshire and Harper’s Bazaar. Both were uncredited, somewhat badly drawn, almost impossible to typeset satisfactorily, and very limited in character set. It was necessary to go back to the drawing book to explore a better balance and easier setting potential. The subsequent character set expansion took Jezebel to a much superior level of functionality, with the addition of multiple alternates and swashes to fit a perfectionist’s eye.
Jezebel is available in all popular font formats for all common platforms, and supports a Western, Eastern and Central European Latin languages, as well as Baltic, Celtic/Welsh, Esperanto, Maltese and Turkish. The OpenType version, Jezebel Pro, combines the extra large character set (over 650 characters) with many handy OpenType features, including discretionary ligatures and tons of alternates and swashes distributed over the stylistic, swash, and titling features.
Two bonus fonts are included with Jezebel. The first one is Canada Type’s digitization of Harper’s Bazaar’s basic set and alternates. The second one consists of over 35 wordmarks, ranging from Hello and Cheers to multiple language representations of Yes and Thank You.