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Adobe Fonts (formerly Typekit) is an online service that provides its subscribers with access to its font library, under a single licensing agreement. [1] The fonts may be used directly on websites, [ 2 ] or synced via Adobe Creative Cloud to applications on the subscriber's computers.
Adobe Font Folio was a collection of more than 2,400 OpenType fonts, [1] designed by several renowned type foundries. As of early 2005, there were around 10,000 fonts available in OpenType format. Adobe's font library makes up under a third of the total, all of which are included in Font Folio. The product was discontinued in June 2022. [2]
Source Code Pro is a set of monospaced OpenType fonts designed to work well in coding environments. This family of fonts complements the Source Sans family and is available in seven weights: Extralight, Light, Regular, Medium, Semibold, Bold, Black. Changes from Source Sans Pro include: [1] Long x-height; Dotted zero; Redesigned i, j, and l
Adobe Originals logo Adobe Garamond, one of the program's first fonts. The Adobe Originals program is a series of digital typefaces created by Adobe Systems from 1989 for professional use, intended to be of extremely high design quality while offering a large feature set across many languages.
Under Adobe's development, the font family supports the ISO-Adobe character set for the PostScript version. In OpenType Std version, it supports the Adobe Western 2 character set. Monotype also produced versions that include Cyrillic or Central European characters. The font was also named "Geometric 752" by Bitstream, "BH" by Itek.
The CID-keyed font (also known as CID font, CID-based font, short for Character Identifier font) is a font structure, originally developed for PostScript font formats, designed to address a large number of glyphs. It was developed to support pictographic East Asian character sets, as these comprise many more characters than the Latin, Greek and ...
News Gothic is a sans-serif typeface designed by Morris Fuller Benton, and was released in 1908 by his employer American Type Founders (ATF). [1] The typeface is similar in proportion and structure to Franklin Gothic, also designed by Benton, but lighter.
Albertus is a glyphic serif display typeface designed by Berthold Wolpe in the period 1932 to 1940 for the British branch of the printing company Monotype.Wolpe named the font after Albertus Magnus, the thirteenth-century German philosopher and theologian.