Re: Font Question
by Freda Lockert <fredalockert(at)clara.co.uk>
|
Date: |
Sun, 9 Jul 2000 20:15:34 +0100 |
To: |
hwg-basics(at)hwg.org |
References: |
koll canopy |
|
todo: View
Thread,
Original
|
|
<snip>
>"New Times Roman" ... is a "Microsoft" - only - font.
Oh Mr Fuzzy, there was life before Microsoft, despite what Billge
would have us think!
'... Times New Roman - is an historical pastiche drawn by Victor
Lardent for Stanley Morison in London in 1931. It has a humanist axis
but Mannerist proportions, Baroque weight, and sharp, Neoclassical
finish'. From 'The Elements of Typographic Style' by Robert
Bringhurst, publisher Hartley & Marks.
<snip>
Not until the advent (release) of Office 98 for MAC was this font
available for the MAC platform at all. <snip>
To my knowledge it was digitised before MS Office was ever calved and
you can buy it from Adobe, Monotype, and Linotype, among others,
TrueType and Type 1, with no reference to any Mickey$oft copyright or
licence.
Perhaps it's fitting that Microsoft Office's default face is a
mish-mash of historical references with no intrinsic merit of its
own. <grin>.
Regards.
Freda
--
Never give up on what you know in your heart to be right. The world
needs you and your commitment, desperately. - John Denver.
http://www.thp.org
HTML: hwg-basics mailing list archives,
maintained by Webmasters @ IWA