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  1. Gunship Laser Italic - Unknown license
  2. 7th Service Italic - Unknown license
  3. D3 Roadsterism Italic - Unknown license
  4. Chain Reaction Itaric - Unknown license
  5. Xephyr Expanded Italic - Unknown license
  6. WC Fetish Bta - Unknown license
  7. Rogue Hero Italic - Unknown license
  8. Yukon Tech Italic - Personal use only
  9. Hall Fetica Italic - Unknown license
  10. Alexis Laser Italic - Unknown license
  11. D3 Euronism italic - Unknown license
  12. D3 Archism Italic - Unknown license
  13. Untidy Italic Skrawl - Unknown license
  14. It's About Time - Unknown license
  15. Nostromo Condensed Italic - Unknown license
  16. D3 Globalism italic - Unknown license
  17. Uberhölme Lazar Italic - Personal use only
  18. First Order Italic - Unknown license
  19. D3 Digitalism Italic - Unknown license
  20. Wolf's Bane Italic - Unknown license
  21. Quartermain Outline Italic - Unknown license
  22. Permanent daylight Italic - Unknown license
  23. Zamboni Joe Italic - Unknown license
  24. Beam Rider Italic - Unknown license
  25. Drid Herder Italic - Personal use only
  26. Feldicouth Italic Bend - Unknown license
  27. Aquaduct Reverse Italic - Personal use only
  28. Xephyr Shadow Italic - Unknown license
  29. Technically Insane Italic - Unknown license
  30. Thundergod II Italic - Unknown license
  31. Homemade Robot Italic - Unknown license
  32. Small type (italic) - Unknown license
  33. Occoluchi Italic Outline - Unknown license
  34. Spylord Expanded Italic - Unknown license
  35. Year 3000 Italic - Unknown license
  36. Spylord Laser Italic - Unknown license
  37. Curlmudgeon Hollow Italic - Unknown license
  38. D3 Factorism Italic - Unknown license
  39. Pandemonious Puffery Italic - Unknown license
  40. ITC Legacy Serif by ITC, $40.99
    ITC Legacy¿ was designed by American Ronald Arnholm, who was first inspired to develop the typeface when he was a graduate student at Yale. In a type history class, he studied the 1470 book by Eusebius that was printed in the roman type of Nicolas Jenson. Arnholm worked for years to create his own interpretation of the Jenson roman, and he succeeded in capturing much of its beauty and character. As Jenson did not include a companion italic, Arnholm turned to the sixteenth-century types of Claude Garamond for inspiration for the italics of ITC Legacy. Arnholm was so taken by the strength and integrity of these oldstyle seriffed forms that he used their essential skeletal structures to develop a full set of sans serif faces. ITC Legacy includes a complete family of weights from book to ultra, with Old style Figures and small caps, making this a good choice for detailed book typography or multi-faceted graphic design projects. In 1458, Charles VII sent the Frenchman Nicolas Jenson to learn the craft of movable type in Mainz, the city where Gutenberg was working. Jenson was supposed to return to France with his newly learned skills, but instead he traveled to Italy, as did other itinerant printers of the time. From 1468 on, he was in Venice, where he flourished as a punchcutter, printer and publisher. He was probably the first non-German printer of movable type, and he produced about 150 editions. Though his punches have vanished, his books have not, and those produced from about 1470 until his death in 1480 have served as a source of inspiration for type designers over centuries. His Roman type is often called the first true Roman." Notable in almost all Jensonian Romans is the angled crossbar on the lowercase e, which is known as the "Venetian Oldstyle e."" Featured in: Best Fonts for Logos
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