1 matches
One of the many Garamond Italics. Which one is difficult to say at this size. A larger image including the capital C would help.
1 matches
Hello!
I want reverse italics (you know how when you do italics it adjust the weighting to the right, well I want to adjust it to the left) for Calibri.
Please provide.
Thanks in advance,
Panarchy
PS: I'm using Office 2007 SP1
5 matches
Hi there!
I was wondering if anyone knows of a free (preferably open-source) font very similar to Garamond? I am specifically looking for a font with proper Bold, Italic, and Bold-Italic versions.
All possible suggestions are more than welcome.
Thanks so much!
Etienne
1 matches
The italics are not really italics, just oblique roman, and while I hope to find the correct version even jst the name would cut the deal for this client of mine.
Can you name it?
Grazie mille!
1 matches
Hello,
Do yoo know where I can get the following fonts free. I can't really afford to buy them as I've seen their prices. Besides that, I will be only using them for a short while for my project.
-Garamond (Just Garamond)
-Garamond-Bold
-Aquaduct Plain
-Treefrog
THanks.
2 matches
the S and C are - most probably - the Charme. The Slogan and the Corrida come close. pazio and asa shout Garamond of course and there are enough matches even for the z. But I have found none for the p, not in my whole Garamond collection nor out there. Which is - to say the least - frustrating! Am I having an off day?
2 matches
[quote:be0b9c7fa2="fontDJ"]
I mean the font name .Since it is a common font , its name should be simple and easy to remember [/quote:be0b9c7fa2]
I'm afraid that, if you are 'complaining' about the complicated name of this "font", you'll have to learn something about typography and the history of typography to understand that your remark is slightly misplaced.
The type Garamond stems from the early times of printing. A few hundred years back. The Garamond has been the example for many other type designs. Through time more and more faces of the Garamond have developed. Bold faces, oblique faces, extended faces, condensed faces and the combinations of those. Every face, therefore, has its own name/description to distinguish it from the other Garamond faces. These faces are what you call a font. We call it a typeface: the Type and the Face. To us a font is a typeface in a particular size. 8 points, 12 point, 18 points, 36 points and so on.
What you are asking for is us to call a grizzly bear simply a bear. Because that is easier. But where does that leave the brown bear, the ice bear, the ... bear and so on?
So when you ask for a 'font' ID you get a 'typeface' With the full identification. OK?
End of lecture.
|
Related keywords (10)
|