article Related Topics:
Garamond,_Claude
 

There are several typefaces called Garamond. Some are based on the work of the influential 16th century French type designer Claude Garamond. The “original” Garamond belongs to the family of “Renaissance” or “old style” serif typefaces. The font that most resembles the original Garamond is not named Garamond, but Granjon, to differentiate them from the many other kinds of Garamonds.

Other typefaces such as Monotype Garamond are not, typically, based on Garamond’s work. Instead, they build on the rather different typefaces of Jean Jannon. Italic typefaces called “Garamond” are almost never based on Garamond’s own italics; usually they are derived from typefaces by Robert Granjon, a younger colleague of Garamond. He also designed a coordinated series of italic typefaces. Though less influential, they also clearly belong to a typeface related to Garamond. They also have notably graceful forms.

The widely used Adobe Garamond Pro was designed by Robert Slimbach in 1989. It is the type used by the Harry Potter books.

Apple Computer used a narrow form of ITC Garamond known as Apple Garamond or AppleMond for its advertising copy for a fairly long period of time from the early 1980s until about 2001. Though the use of the font provided a distinct graphic identity for Apple, they ultimately switched over to a sans-serif font called Myriad for their headlines and logos. The official Apple Garamond font was never made available to the public, but a very similar font known as ITC Garamond Narrow was part of a popular Apple font pack in the System 7 era. Further details are available in the Apple typography article.

Sample of


"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog" is written using a font not listed here. The alphabet and characters shown below that are in Adobe Garamond Pro.

See also


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References


Typefaces | Serif typefaces

Garamond (Schriftart) | Garamond | Garamond

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Garamond".

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