Here is the website which uses the font I am trying to identify:
http://bergenassembly.no/en/news/
I would be super grateful for any help!
Many thanks,
Henry
Please help me identify this font from the Bergen Assembly website
-
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Fri Jun 10, 2016 12:26 pm
-
- Top Typographer
- Posts: 977
- Joined: Tue Jun 16, 2015 8:12 pm
- Location: Sheffield, South Yorkshire
- Contact:
Re: Please help me identify this font from the Bergen Assembly website
The website is a mess.
Looks like an ordinary sans serif font but they happen to have randomly replaced some basic latin characters with characters from the Letterlike Symbols unicode block. For instance the blackletter R which keeps appearing, the script l and the 'per' symbol instead of a lowercase p, but they haven't replaced all instances of those characters.
Looks like an ordinary sans serif font but they happen to have randomly replaced some basic latin characters with characters from the Letterlike Symbols unicode block. For instance the blackletter R which keeps appearing, the script l and the 'per' symbol instead of a lowercase p, but they haven't replaced all instances of those characters.
-
- Top Typographer
- Posts: 1360
- Joined: Wed Oct 01, 2003 1:19 pm
- Location: North Dallas, Texas
Re: Please help me identify this font from the Bergen Assembly website
The standard letters design could have started from something like Lightline Gothic by Monotype, Berthold or Mannesmann Scangraphic for instance.
with outlining, squashing and a better /M.-
- Top Typographer
- Posts: 977
- Joined: Tue Jun 16, 2015 8:12 pm
- Location: Sheffield, South Yorkshire
- Contact:
Re: Please help me identify this font from the Bergen Assembly website
I think the capital M which sometimes appears is the script M from the Letterlike Symbols block.