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Times New Roman® WGL

- by Stanley Morison, Victor Lardent
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Times New Roman® WGL
  Format: Windows TrueType

Price: US$ 43.00
  
... is part of the Times New Roman® Font Family, comprising altogether 47 fonts in Windows TrueType format.
Character set features:
cyrillic latinext symbolpi greek isoadobe isoadobe2 adobece
657 characters
Character maps: Encoding map   
Linked font group:
Times New Roman® WGL
Times New Roman® WGL Italic
Times New Roman® WGL Bold
Times New Roman® WGL Bold Italic
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Product is contained in:
Times New Roman® WGL Complete Family Pack
Technical information  

Other families by this designer ...

Linotype Font Sample for Times New Roman® by Adobe Font Family
Linotype Font Sample for Times New Roman® World Font Family

Documents referring to this product ...

The right fonts for the three official alphabets of the European Union. With the entrance of Bulgaria in January 2007, the Cyrillic script joined the Latin and Greek alphabets to become the Union’s third official alphabet. Linotype Original Fonts with the “W1G” additional marking meet the character set allocation in accordance with Linotype W1G (World Glyph 1) norm. Here is a list of all languages supported by W1G fonts (PDF file English/German, 1 mb). Search our [...]
The British advertising designer and draftsman at The Times, London, Victor Lardent (born 1905, died 1968), created the font Times New Roman® under the direction of Stanley Morison in 1932.
Stanley Morison – born 6. 5. 1889 in Wanstead, England, died 11. 10. 1967 in London, England – typographer, type designer. 1913–14: works for "The Imprint". 1914–18: is sent to prison as a conscientious objector. 1919–21: works for Pelican Press and from 1921–23 for Cloister Press in Manchester. 1923–30: co-editor of "The Fleuron" magazine with Holbrook Jackson, Francis Meynell, B. H. Newdigate and Oliver Simon. 1923–67: typography consultant to the Monotype Corporation. From 1923 onwards: [...]

About Times New Roman® WGL ...

Linotype usage sample for Times New Roman® WGL
Designer: Stanley Morison / Victor Lardent, 1932
Times New Roman® WGL belongs to the Times New Roman® Font Family which is part of the Monotype Originals.
In 1931, The Times of London commissioned a new text type design from Stanley Morison and the Monotype Corporation, after Morison had written an article criticizing The Times for being badly printed and typographically behind the times. The new design was supervised by Stanley Morison and drawn by Victor Lardent, an artist from the advertising department of The Times. Morison used an older typeface, Plantin, as the basis for his design, but made revisions for legibility and economy of space (always important concerns for newspapers). As the old type used by the newspaper had been called "Times Old Roman," Morison's revision became "Times New Roman." The Times of London debuted the new typeface in October 1932, and after one year the design was released for commercial sale. The Linotype version, called simply "Times," was optimized for line-casting technology, though the differences in the basic design are subtle. The typeface was very successful for the Times of London, which used a higher grade of newsprint than most newspapers. The better, whiter paper enhanced the new typeface's high degree of contrast and sharp serifs, and created a sparkling, modern look. In 1972, Walter Tracy designed Times Europa for The Times of London. This was a sturdier version, and it was needed to hold up to the newest demands of newspaper printing: faster presses and cheaper paper. In the United States, the Times font family has enjoyed popularity as a magazine and book type since the 1940s. Times continues to be very popular around the world because of its versatility and readability. And because it is a standard font on most computers and digital printers, it has become universally familiar as the office workhorse. Times™, Times™ Europa, and Times New Roman™ are sure bets for proposals, annual reports, office correspondence, magazines, and newspapers.
Linotype offers many versions of this font:
Times™ is the universal version of Times, used formerly as the matrices for the Linotype hot metal line-casting machines. The basic four weights of roman, italic, bold and bold italic are standard fonts on most printers. There are also small caps, Old style Figures, phonetic characters, and Central European characters.
Times™ Ten is the version specially designed for smaller text (12 point and below); its characters are wider and the hairlines are a little stronger. Times Ten has many weights for Latin typography, as well as several weights for Central European, Cyrillic, and Greek typesetting.
Times™ Eighteen is the headline version, ideal for point sizes of 18 and larger. The characters are subtly condensed and the hairlines are finer.
Search this or similar products by the following keywords: Cyrillic, EU-Fonts, European language support, Greek, Hellenic, WGL.

Times New Roman is a trademark of The Monotype Corporation registered in the United States Patent and Trademark Office and may be registered in certain jurisdictions.

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Page last edited: 2009-07-31