"Got Milk?" Campaign, 20th Anniversary
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The Goodby Silverstein Partners
Oversimplifications of the history abound. Here's what really happened: Jon Steel and Carole Rankin were at a focus group when the clouds parted and a woman said, "The only time I even think about milk is when I run out of it." Goodby scrawled "got milk?" on a poster board for a meeting and decided it might be a tagline. And Silverstein set it in that typeface that has by now been appropriated ("got ____?") by lots of junk, donuts, wine and Jesus folks. — Adweek
That typeface is an otherwise forgotten ATF release from 1935:Phenix American. Perhaps Silverstein was lured to the design's distinctive 'k'. The uppercase — which reveals the heavy Art Deco stylings of the typeface — was rarely (if ever) used, but they trotted it out for the anniversary party invitation below.
Phenix (as it was originally known) was issued in metal as a single weight. In 2011, Steve Jackaman and Ashley Muir of the Red Rooster foundry expanded the family to four weights for their Phenix Pro.
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Source: https://archive.org.Scan by Dr. David M. MacMillan. License: CC BY.
Specimen of Phenix (the name by which it was originally known) from ATF's A Supplement to the Book of American Types, 1941.
Source: http://www.flickr.com.Scan by James Puckett. License: CC BY.
Specimen in a catalog from Southern New England Typographic Service, ca. 1950s.
Source: http://www.adweek.com.License: All Rights Reserved.