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ITC Johnston™ Light OsF

- de Richard Dawson, Dave Farey
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ITC Johnston™ Light OsF
  Formato: Windows TrueType

Precio: 26.00 US$
  
... pertenece a ITC Johnston™ Font Family, que incluye 15 fuentes en formato Windows TrueType.
Características del conjunto de caracteres:
euro osf alternates
249 caracteres
Tablas de caracteres: Tabla de codificación   
Grupo de fuentes enlazado:
ITC Johnston™ Light OsF
ITC Johnston™ Bold OsF
ITC Johnston™ Light Italic OsF
ITC Johnston™ Bold Italic OsF
Put the core family into shopping cart Añadir grupo de fuente
Productos incluidos en:
GoldEdition 2.0 DVD for Mac OS and Windows
ITC Johnston Roman Volume
Especificaciones técnicas  

ITC Johnston™ Light OsF
  Formato: Windows PostScript

Precio: 26.00 US$
  
... pertenece a ITC Johnston™ Font Family, que incluye 15 fuentes en formato Windows PostScript.
Características del conjunto de caracteres:
euro osf alternates
246 caracteres
Tablas de caracteres: Tabla de codificación   
Grupo de fuentes enlazado:
ITC Johnston™ Light OsF
ITC Johnston™ Bold OsF
ITC Johnston™ Light Italic OsF
ITC Johnston™ Bold Italic OsF
Put the core family into shopping cart Añadir grupo de fuente
Productos incluidos en:
GoldEdition 2.0 DVD for Mac OS and Windows
ITC Johnston Roman Volume
Especificaciones técnicas  

ITC Johnston™ Light OsF
  Formato: Mac PostScript

Precio: 26.00 US$
  
... pertenece a ITC Johnston™ Font Family, que incluye 15 fuentes en formato Mac PostScript.
Características del conjunto de caracteres:
euro osf alternates
246 caracteres
Tablas de caracteres: Tabla de codificación   
Grupo de fuentes enlazado:
ITC Johnston™ Light OsF
ITC Johnston™ Bold OsF
ITC Johnston™ Light Italic OsF
ITC Johnston™ Bold Italic OsF
Put the core family into shopping cart Añadir grupo de fuente
Productos incluidos en:
GoldEdition 2.0 DVD for Mac OS and Windows
ITC Johnston Roman Volume
Especificaciones técnicas  

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Documentos que se refieren a este producto ...

“Mind the Gap?” ¡No existen problemas en el soporte OpenType para la fuente ITC Johnston!
David Farey (born 1943) created the fonts ITC Beesknees™ (1991), Bodoni™ Unique, Cachet™, Font, Gabardine, Greyhound™, ITC Highlander® (1993), ITC Johnston™ (with Richard Dawson, 1999), Little Louis, ITC Ozwald® (1992), Virgin Roman, Zemestro™ (2003), Tanseek Modern™ (with Arlette Boutros, Mourad Boutros, Richard Dawson, 2008), Tanseek Traditional™ (with Arlette Boutros, Mourad Boutros, Richard Dawson, 2008), Azbuka™ (with Richard Dawson, 2008).
Edward Johnston – born 11. 2. 1872 in San José, Uruguay, died 26. 11. 1944 in Ditchling, England – type designer, calligrapher, author, teacher. Studied medicine at the University of Edinburgh. 1898: obtains his Ph. D. Moves to London. Studies ancient writing techniques in the British Museum. 1899–1913: teaches at the Central School of Arts and Crafts in London in the new lettering department. 1901–40: teaches at the Royal College of Art in London. 1906: his book "Writing and Illuminating [...]
The two British type designers Richard Dawson and Dave Farey created the fonts ITC Golden Cockerel™ (1996) and ITC Johnston™ (1999). Richard Dawson and David Farey created in 2008 also Tanseek Modern™ and Tanseek Traditional™, together with Arlette Boutros and Mourad Boutros, and Azbuka™

Acerca de ITC Johnston™ Light OsF ...

Linotype usage sample for ITC Johnston™ Light OsF
Diseñador: Richard Dawson / Dave Farey, 1999
ITC Johnston™ Light OsF pertenece a ITC Johnston™ Font Family que es parte de ITC Collection.

El texto se muestra en inglés, ya que no está disponible en su idioma.

ITC Johnston is the result of the combined talents of Dave Farey and Richard Dawson, based on the work of Edward Johnston. In developing ITC Johnston, says London type designer Dave Farey, he did “lots of research on not only the face but the man.” Edward Johnston was something of an eccentric, “famous for sitting in a deck chair and carrying toast in his pockets.” (The deck chair was his preferred furniture in his own living room; the toast was so that he¿d always have sustenance near at hand.) Johnston was also almost single-handedly responsible, early in this century, for the revival in Britain of the Renaissance calligraphic tradition of the chancery italic. His book Writing & Illuminating, & Lettering (with its peculiar extraneous comma in the title) is a classic on its subject, and his influence on his contemporaries was tremendous. He is perhaps best remembered, however, for the alphabet that he designed in 1916 for the London Underground Railway (now London Transport), which was based on his original “block letter” model.

Johnston¿s letters were constructed very carefully, based on his study of historical writing techniques at the British Museum. His capital letters took their form from the best classical Roman inscriptions. “He had serious rules for his sans serif style,” says Farey, “particularly the height-to-weight ratio of 1:7 for the construction of line weight, and therefore horizontals and verticals were to be the same thickness. Johnston¿s O¿s and C¿s and G¿s and even his S¿s were constructions of perfect circles. This was a bit of a problem as far as text sizes were concerned, or in reality sizes smaller than half an inch. It also precluded any other weight but medium ¿ any weight lighter or heavier than his 1:7 relationship.” Johnston was famously slow at any project he undertook, says Farey. “He did eventually, under protest, create a bolder weight, in capitals only ¿ which took twenty years to complete.”

Farey and his colleague Richard Dawson have based ITC Johnston on Edward Johnston¿s original block letters, expanding them into a three-weight type family. Johnston himself never called his Underground lettering a typeface, according to Farey. It was an alphabet meant for signage and other display purposes, designed to be legible at a glance rather than readable in passages of text. Farey and Dawson¿s adaptation retains the sparkling starkness of Johnston¿s letters while combining comfortably into text.

Johnston¿s block letter bears an obvious resemblance to Gill Sans, the highly successful type family developed by Monotype in the 1920s. The young Eric Gill had studied under Johnston at the London College of Printing, worked on the Underground project with him, and followed many of the same principles in developing his own sans serif typeface. The Johnston letters gave a characteristic look to London¿s transport system after the First World War, but it was Gill Sans that became the emblematic letter form of British graphic design for decades. (Johnston¿s sans serif continued in use in the Underground until the early ¿80s, when a revised and modernized version, with a tighter fit and a larger x-height, was designed by the London design firm Banks and Miles.)

Farey and Dawson, working from their studio in London¿s Clerkenwell, wanted to create a type family that was neither a museum piece nor a bastardization, and that would “provide an alternative of the same school” to the omnipresent Gill Sans. “These alphabets,” says Farey, referring to the Johnston letters, “have never been developed as contemporary styles.” He and Dawson not only devised three weights of ITC Johnston but gave it a full set of small capitals in each weight ¿ something that neither the original Johnston face nor the Gill faces have ¿ as well as old-style figures and several alternate characters.

ITC Johnston is a trademark of International Typeface Corporation and may be registered in certain jurisdictions.

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Última edición: 2009-11-04