Football Jersey Fonts
Football is in the air! Like all great team sports, football (or soccer, if you are in the US) inspires its fans to identify with their favorite team’s players, and sometimes even with a specific city or country. Each football team has its own visual identity, and the appearance of their logos and jerseys are one of the most exciting areas of graphic design. And it is no surprise that fonts play a strong role!
Below are images of just a few of the jerseys known and
[...]
Los clientes de todo el mundo visitan Linotype.com cada día para adquirir las fuentes. A continuación, encontrará una lista con las 20 familias tipográficas más solicitadas por nuestros clientes en 2008. ¿Las conoce todas?
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), Virtuosa® Classic (2009),
[...]
The Palatino alphabet was designed after many careful studies together with the punchcutter August Rosenberger. Even such small details as the serifs were carefully scrutinized. In 1948 tests in offset printing were made, especially in connection with the weight of the serifs. You see how important such serifs are.
The type Palatino is named after the Italian writing master of the 16th century Giambattista Palatino. I hope he will forgive me once a day in heaven and give me his blessing in
[...]
Orion™
Hermann Zapf made his first scetches for Orion in 1963. Zapf's aim was to create a neutral textface which can be ideally used as a newspaper face. Its strokethickness and open letterforms also fits well for book and magazine production. The final two weights of Orion were released in 1974 for the Linofilm photocomposing machine.
Optima™
Optima was designed by Hermann Zapf and is his most successful typeface. In 1950, Zapf made his first sketches while visiting the Santa Croce
[...]
Consulte más características de las fuentes en nuestro Archivo de características de las fuentes.
Typographic Tip of the Month from Linotype’s Type Director Akira Kobayashi!
Junio 2006: Apóstrofos y comillas
¿Qué glifo es correcto: la tilde, el acento agudo o el apóstrofo? - Aquí se describe el uso correcto del molesto signo de puntuación que significa omisión y forma el posesivo (y a veces el plural).
Apóstrofos
El símbolo de comillas se usa aquí incorrectamente
[...]
El formato tipográfico OpenType es una mejora de TrueType™ y PostScript® desarrollado conjuntamente por Adobe Systems Inc. y Microsoft Corporation. OpenType combina estas dos tecnologías y amplía sus capacidades. El resultado es una nueva generación de tipos de letra OpenType con mejores funciones tipográficas y de maquetación y la posibilidad de conjuntos de caracteres ampliados totalmente compatibles con Unicode™.
Consejo: Si desea un listado de tipos de letra OpenType escriba OPENTYPE en
[...]
Optima®, designed by Hermann Zapf, combines the clarity of Modern Face with the objectivity of sans-serif typefaces. He was influenced by the stone inlay alphabets of Roman Antiquity as well as typefaces of the early Renaissance. The clear, elegant characters of Optima can often be seen in advertisements, especially for cosmetics.
El texto se muestra en inglés, ya que no está disponible en su idioma.
Optima™ was designed by Hermann Zapf and is his most successful typeface. In 1950, Zapf made his
first sketches while visiting the Santa Croce church in Florence. He sketched letters from grave plates that had been cut about 1530, and as he had no other paper with him at the time, the sketches were done on two 1000 lire bank notes.
These letters from the floor of the church inspired Optima, a typeface that is classically roman in proportion and character, but without serifs. The letterforms were designed in the proportions of the Golden Ratio. In 1952, after careful legibility testing, the first drawings were finished.
The type was cut by the famous punchcutter August Rosenberger at the D. Stempel AG typefoundry in Frankfurt. Optima was produced in matrices for the Linotype typesetting machines and released in 1958. With the clear, simple elegance of its sans serif forms and the warmly human touches of its tapering stems, this family has proved popular around the world. Optima is an all-purpose typeface; it works for just about anything from book text to signage. It is available in 12 weights and 4 companion fonts with Central European characters and accents.
In 2002, more than 50 years after the first sketches, Hermann Zapf and Akira Kobayashi completed Optima nova , an expansion and redesign of the Optima family.