1 posts
Looks like Stone Sans, but no blueprint lines, also the "a' is kinda different...
2 posts
? Hi Guys, great site, hope you can help.
We've used Stone Sans as our corporate typeface for a few years and while we love it, we would like to use a new typeface for our new ID.
We love the sans serif nature of Stone while still having some variation in line width and unique shapes like the lower case 'k'.
Can you guys recommend or suggest any alternatives that we should try. We are a design studio so want something fresh, but not too modern that it looks like we've just graduated and don't know type yet!
Thanks in advance for your suggestions.
2 posts
Can anybody help me with this font?
It is ITC Stone informal OS Bold
Thank you in advance
1 posts
This font created for personal use only, please enjoy typing in two of the ancient writings from the Rosetta Stone way back in 196 BC, hieroglyphs were normally enclosed in a cartouche, the greek is modern lowercase for comparison only, demotic to follow soon.
From the Ptolemaic Period, 196 B.C.
Height: 114.400 cm (max.)
Width: 72.300 cm
Thickness: 27.900 cm
Weight: about 760 kilograms (1,676 lb.)
The Rosetta Stone is inscribed in 3 languages:
Demotic (the everyday script, used to write documents),
Greek (the language of Ionian Greeks, an administrative script), and
Hieroglyphs (for priestly business).
2 posts
Brendel Informatik & SoftMaker Software GmbH's Cornered Italic, SoftFonts' Ultra Serif Italic and WSI's Chisel Italic - although the last one is a bit more slanted - will all do the job except for the E. That one seems to be modified.
Because of the names of the companies that claim the copyright it is obvious that all these are copycats. But I have not found the original. The original might have the correct E. Hopefully Heron jumps in. She normally knows the name of the original.
1 posts
Very regal, certainly reminds me of a stone-cut style.
1 posts
For MACKEY Chisel Italic (WSI), Cornered Italic (1990-1993 Brendel Informatik & SoftMaker Software GmbH), Ultra Serif SF (Serif) which all three are identical will do the job.
See also this post.
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