English Deutsch Français

Edison™ Semi Bold

- by Hermann Zapf
PDF sample
Add  to your list of favorite fonts
Add to favorites

Edison™ Com Semi Bold
  Format: OpenType Com

Price: US$ 65.00
  
... is part of the Edison™ Font Family, comprising altogether 5 fonts in OpenType Com format.
Character set features:
euro latinext LTCom_logo isoadobe2 adobece
388 characters
Character maps: Encoding map   
Linked font group:
Edison™ Com Book
Edison™ Com Book Italic
Edison™ Com Semi Bold
Edison™ Com Semi Bold Italic
Put the core family into shopping cart Add font group
Product is contained in:
The Linotype Originals OpenType Edition Version Two
Edison™ Com Complete Family Value Pack
Technical information  

Other families by this designer ...

Linotype Font Sample for Aldus® Font Family
Linotype Font Sample for Aurelia™ Font Family
Linotype Font Sample for Comenius® Antiqua BQ Font Family
Linotype Font Sample for Comenius® Antiqua Font Family
Linotype Font Sample for Kompakt™ Font Family
Linotype Font Sample for Marconi® Font Family
Linotype Font Sample for Medici® Script Font Family
Linotype Font Sample for Melior® Font Family

Documents referring to this product ...

Georgia® is a Windows system font, and is not part of the Linotype portfolio. Alternative typefaces are Excelsior™, Edison™ and Egyptienne F™.
German designer Hermann Zapf created the following fonts: Aldus® (1954), Aldus Nova (2005), Aurelia™ (1983), Comenius® Antiqua BQ (1976), Edison™ (1978), Kompakt™ (1954), Marconi® (1976), Medici® Script (1971), Melior® (1952), Noris Script® (1976), Optima® (1958), Optima nova (2002), Orion™ (1974), Palatino™® (1950), Palatino nova (2005), Palatino™ Sans (2006), Saphir™ (1953), Sistina® (1950), Vario™ (1982), Venture™ (1969), Linotype Zapf Essentials™ (2002), [...]

About Edison™ Semi Bold ...

Linotype usage sample for Edison™ Com Semi Bold
Designer: Hermann Zapf, 1978
Edison™ Semi Bold belongs to the Edison™ Font Family which is part of the Linotype Originals.
Edison is the result of Hermann Zapf's wish to create a typeface with maximum legibility for the Digiset typesetting machine (a typesetter produced by the German firm Dr.-Ing Rudolf Hell GmbH in Kiel).

The lowercase letters of Edison are enlarged as the result of reading tests, while the capital letters are slightly reduced. The 8 point size - normally used for newspapers - look more like 9,5 point. This enlarged x-height of the Edison lowercase letters was the result of tests on newspaper pages with bad (gray) inking to find the most comfortable proportions and the weight for the basic roman. This all is important because good typefaces tailored to the purpose of getting information easily from the printed page is of the same importance as the presentation of the message itself.

Hermann Zapf's Edison is a modern, wilful newspaper font. Its free and individual forms mark this font as a newsprint font of the new generation. The strong strokes of Edison can give an impression of a slab serif font and its robust forms make this font very flexible. Even inferior paper and newsprint techniques cannot disturb Edison's characters or classic impression.

In 1990, Linotype AG merged with Dr.-Ing Rudolf Hell GmbH, forming the Linotype-Hell AG (today Linotype GmbH). Since then, Linotype has been the official source of all fonts that were originally designed for the Hell Corporation. Linotype has also improved the typefaces using new technologies, including OpenType.
Search this or similar products by the following keywords: 1970s, 70s, anno 1970, Book, Catalogs, Catalogues, CE, Central European, Com, Instructions, Magazine, Manuals, Menus, Newsletters, Newspaper, Professional, Readable, Serif, Text.

Edison is a trademark of Linotype Corp. and may be registered in certain jurisdictions in the name of Linotype Corp. or its licensee Linotype GmbH.

For further information do not hesitate to contact us via:

Phone:+49 (0) 6172 484-418
Fax:+49 (0) 6172 484-429
e-mail:info@linotype.com
Copyright © 2008 Linotype GmbH. All rights reserved.
We reserve the right of errors and changes.
Top of page
Page last edited: 2008-02-27