La Palmera was originally a tavern, now a pub, founded by a retired night watchman in 1920 (although it may have been founded much earlier).
It is a survivor of the La Palma street. who has kept, as Carlos Osorio tells at Tabernas y Tapas, all the elements of the classic Madrilenian tavern: tiled decoration, a patched zinc bar and a wooden front door with painted glass signs with marvellous lettering in rather poor condition.
In addition to the main sign made up of geometric lettering, other smaller crystals accompany it, offering many ways to refresh the gullet and fill the craw. These are contrasted letters with an Art Deco flair that narrow and widen at the sign-maker’s whim to make the composition as lustrous as possible.
At MTM we have kept this idea of adapting to the format to develop a variable typography to meet the needs of the most demanding modern designer.
We have also added stylistic sets to play with the lowercase letters and a set of ornaments that appear in the framing, for a complete Art Deco Madrid tavern experience.
The Palmera signs have also inspired those of Toboggan, a modern bar in the Legazpi area, and will now hopefully come to digital life thanks to the hard work of MTM.
The benefit that a large company obtains by using a font in a national press advertising campaign is not the same as that received by a small local business that uses it on a poster.
That is why our typefaces are licensed based on the size of the end customer, who is the owner of the licence and can use it without limitations and share it with his design studio or printing company.
To test our types and make proposals to clients, write an email to gerencia@mtm.madrid and we will provide you fonts for presentations purposes.
For unlimited commercial use in small companies with up to 5 employees.
For unlimited commercial use in companies with between 6 and 50 employees.
For unlimited commercial use in companies with 51 employees or more.