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  2. ITC Avant Garde - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ITC_Avant_Garde

    Date released. 1970–1977. ITC Avant Garde Gothic is a geometric sans serif font family based on the logo font used in the Avant Garde magazine. Herb Lubalin devised the logo concept and its companion headline typeface, and then he and Tom Carnase, a partner in Lubalin's design firm, worked together to transform the idea into a full-fledged ...

  3. Helvetica - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helvetica

    Helvetica, also known by its original name Neue Haas Grotesk, is a widely used sans-serif typeface developed in 1957 by Swiss typeface designer Max Miedinger and Eduard Hoffmann. Helvetica is a neo-grotesque design, one influenced by the famous 19th-century (1890s) typeface Akzidenz-Grotesk and other German and Swiss designs. [2]

  4. Akzidenz-Grotesk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Akzidenz-Grotesk

    Akzidenz-Grotesk is a sans-serif typeface family originally released by the Berthold Type Foundry of Berlin. "Akzidenz" indicates its intended use as a typeface for commercial print runs such as publicity, tickets and forms, as opposed to fine printing, and "grotesque" was a standard name for sans-serif typefaces at the time.

  5. Goudy Old Style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Goudy_Old_Style

    Goudy Old Style (also known as just Goudy) is an old-style serif typeface originally created by Frederic W. Goudy for American Type Founders (ATF) in 1915.. Suitable for text and display applications, Goudy Old Style matches the historicist trend of American printing in the early twentieth century, taking inspiration from the printing of the Italian Renaissance without a specific historical model.

  6. Century type family - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Century_type_family

    Century type family. Century is a family of serif type faces particularly intended for body text. The family originates from a first design, Century Roman, cut by American Type Founders designer Linn Boyd Benton in 1894 for master printer Theodore Low De Vinne, for use in The Century Magazine. [1] ATF rapidly expanded it into a very large ...

  7. Zapf Dingbats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zapf_Dingbats

    ZapfDingbats, the PostScript version of ITC Zapf Dingbats, is distributed with Acrobat Reader 5 and 5.1. URW++ donated a version of ZapfDingbats to GhostScript under the non-commercial Aladdin Free Public License. The font can be found in GhostPCL source code, as D050000L.ttf . ITC Zapf Dingbats Std is an OpenType version of the font family ...

  8. Noto fonts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noto_fonts

    Noto is a font family comprising over 100 individual computer fonts, which are together designed to cover all the scripts encoded in the Unicode standard. As of October 2016, Noto fonts cover all 93 scripts defined in Unicode version 6.1 (April 2012), although fewer than 30,000 of the nearly 75,000 CJK unified ideographs in version 6.0 are covered.

  9. FF DIN - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FF_DIN

    FF DIN is a sans-serif typeface in the industrial or "grotesque" style. It was designed in 1995 by Albert-Jan Pool, based on DIN-Mittelschrift and DIN-Engschrift, as defined in the German standard DIN 1451. DIN is an acronym for Deutsches Institut für Normung (German Institute of Standardisation). [2] It was published by FontShop in its ...

  10. DejaVu fonts - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DejaVu_fonts

    The DejaVu fonts are a superfamily of fonts designed for broad coverage of the Unicode Universal Character Set. The fonts are derived from Bitstream Vera ( sans-serif) and Bitstream Charter ( serif ), two fonts released by Bitstream under a free license that allowed derivative works based upon them; the Vera and Charter families were limited ...

  11. Open-source Unicode typefaces - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-source_Unicode_typefaces

    The Free UCS Outline Fonts [1] (also known as freefont) is a font collection project. The project was started by Primož Peterlin and is currently administered by Steve White. The aim of this project has been to produce a package of fonts by collecting existing free fonts and special donations, to support as many Unicode characters as possible.