New CinemaB adopts an abbreviated font in contrast to New CinemaA which is a regular font, and has a design unique to movie subtitles called "air holes. Also, B, which has a unique personality, is the best typeface for expressing the image of old movies and the atmosphere of handwriting. What was an air hole? In the past, subtitling was a method (a type method) in which a chemical film was applied to a movie film and the letterpress letterpress was pressed directly to make a hole in the image. With this method, for example, the inner part surrounded by the character lines such as "mouth" and "rice field" will fall out, resulting in a state like "■". To solve this problem, a part of the text now has a break called "air hole". Also, in actual letterpress, the size of one character is very small (1 mm or less), and unique abbreviations have also been used to prevent the characters from being crushed. Nowadays, due to technological advances, the laser method has become the mainstream and it is no longer necessary to open an "air hole", but Fontworks has a typeface (New CinemaB D) with a nostalgic taste "air hole" unique to this subtitle We decided to release two types of typefaces (New CinemaA D) as LETS typefaces for members. Comment from the Type Designers: The requirement for subtitles is that you can get it even if you are not aware of reading. It's important that you can catch your eyes quickly and follow the letters quickly, blend in with the atmosphere of the screen naturally, and not let the viewers be aware of the "presence of subtitles" and "typeface design". In other words, it is a typeface with a natural atmosphere that is airy, has no habits, and does not make an unpleasant assertion. The width of the characters is not uniform, and the balance between kanji and kana is adjusted. In addition, it is also characterized by a large dakuten and semi-dakuten. It is a unique design that has both warmth and tenderness that do not make you feel old or new.