Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The following is a list of typefaces designed by Frederic Goudy.. Goudy was one of America's most prolific designers of metal type. He worked under the influence of the Arts and Crafts movement, and many of his designs are old-style serif designs inspired by the relatively organic structure of typefaces created between the fifteenth and eighteenth centuries, following the lead of earlier ...
A sample of News Gothic. A sample of Bank Gothic. A sample of Franklin Gothic.. All of Benton's typefaces were cut by American Type Founders.. Roycroft (c. 1898), inspired by lettering in the Saturday Evening Post and often credited to Lewis Buddy, though (according to ATF) designed “partly” by Benton.
Benton Sans is a digital typeface family begun by Tobias Frere-Jones in 1995, and expanded by Cyrus Highsmith of Font Bureau.It is based on the sans-serif typefaces designed for American Type Founders by Morris Fuller Benton around the beginning of the twentieth century in the industrial or grotesque style.
Copperplate Gothic is a typeface designed by Frederic W. Goudy and first produced by American Type Founders (ATF) beginning in 1901.. While termed a "Gothic" (another term for sans-serif), the face has small glyphic serifs that act to emphasize the blunt terminus of vertical and horizontal strokes.
M + OUTLINE FONTS [F] Free license VL Gothic VLゴシック: Derived from M+ FONTS and Sazanami Gothic font. Distributed on Vine Linux. [F]? [F] License: same as parent fonts. Sazanami Gothic [22] さざなみゴシック: Distributed on Linux. [F] License: formerly considered free and included with a number of Linux distributions. [23] MS ...
American Type Founders was the largest producer of foundry type in the world, not only of in-house designs, but also from designs that came from merged firms. Many of its designs were created or adapted by Morris Fuller Benton, his father Linn, Joseph W. Phinney or Frederic Goudy.
Alternate Gothic was designed by Morris Fuller Benton for A.T.F. in 1903. It is essentially a moderately bold condensed version of Franklin Gothic, made in three numbered widths - No.1 is the most condensed, 3 the least. One feature that sets it apart from Franklin Gothic is the absence of a bottom serif on the digit 1, like in Akzidenz-Grotesk.
Century Gothic and Levenim MT have minor differences in spacing and punctuation marks. Levenim MT is a version of Century Gothic that includes Hebrew alphabet and is available for free on most versions of Windows. [13] Levenim MT has two weights, namely Regular and Bold. Unlike Century Gothic, Levenim MT does not have true italics.