I was looking at the Adobe Garamond font earlier this moring and found a good supply of ligatures in Roman and Italic and of swash glyphs in the italic.
My search started at the following web page.
http://www.adobe.com/type/
I found various items including the following.
http://store1.adobe.com/cfusion/store/h ... PP10005010
http://store1.adobe.com/type/browser/pd ... emrPro.pdf
http://store1.adobe.com/cfusion/store/h ... PP10005310
http://store1.adobe.com/type/browser/pd ... Pro-It.pdf
I have also found the following.
http://special-1.bl.uk/treasures/festiv ... rFest=0028
I am trying to decide whether the fonts used in that festival book are what are today called Garamond and Garamond Italic.
I have also found the following.
http://www.linotype.com/en/3474/garamon ... ature.html
William Overington
26 June 2008
Ligatures and swash characters in Adobe Garamond
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Hi William,
I don't mind if you post a link every now and then, but in my opinion this is overkill. I visit over 100's of font related links every month, but only post here when I really believe it's useful to other visitors of the forum. Your post looks more like an online favorites storage.
I might be wrong, so I wonder what other visitors of the forum think.
I don't mind if you post a link every now and then, but in my opinion this is overkill. I visit over 100's of font related links every month, but only post here when I really believe it's useful to other visitors of the forum. Your post looks more like an online favorites storage.
I might be wrong, so I wonder what other visitors of the forum think.
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You asked the Question
1. It's very hard to look at a post without adding to View count. Count does not indicate interest or relevance. View count does not indicate acceptance or rejection. Count comes from clever subject titles. Count comes from site traffic. I read every new post for instance and respond only if necessary for my piece of mind.
A post entitled "Pictures of my Cat named Garamond" would get large view counts but not as many as "Pictures of my Dog named Garamond".
2. Long posts should be rewritten -- too many details is too many words. Terse writing is a virtue! Verbose writing is a fault but still accumulates View counts. The reader doesn't need to be lead through every step taken.
3. In my opinion: stop posting discussions about using the Private User Area, three ligs posts are two too many and I don't need to see nuanced changes to private fonts...
4. I am guilty in that I have enjoyed some of the links William has provided and added to his traffic counts, but today's "Ligatures and swash characters in Adobe Garamond" consisting of 7 links had 5 that were too close together or irrelevant to the question.
5. Whether that topic is appropriate for a Font Creator Web Site is of course another question.
A post entitled "Pictures of my Cat named Garamond" would get large view counts but not as many as "Pictures of my Dog named Garamond".
2. Long posts should be rewritten -- too many details is too many words. Terse writing is a virtue! Verbose writing is a fault but still accumulates View counts. The reader doesn't need to be lead through every step taken.
3. In my opinion: stop posting discussions about using the Private User Area, three ligs posts are two too many and I don't need to see nuanced changes to private fonts...
4. I am guilty in that I have enjoyed some of the links William has provided and added to his traffic counts, but today's "Ligatures and swash characters in Adobe Garamond" consisting of 7 links had 5 that were too close together or irrelevant to the question.
A post ending up with two links:-- My search started at the following web page.
http://www.adobe.com/type/
-- I found various items including the following.
http://store1.adobe.com/cfusion/store/h ... PP10005010
http://store1.adobe.com/type/browser/pd ... emrPro.pdf
http://store1.adobe.com/cfusion/store/h ... PP10005310
http://store1.adobe.com/type/browser/pd ... Pro-It.pdf"
That is, "Here's the Festival book and here's some sample Garamond" would have been more direct and in my mind enough to pose the question, "Am I right that this is Garamond?".I have also found the following.
http://special-1.bl.uk/treasures/festiv ... rFest=0028
I am trying to decide whether the fonts used in that festival book are what are today called Garamond and Garamond Italic.
I have also found the following.
http://www.linotype.com/en/3474/garamon ... ature.html
5. Whether that topic is appropriate for a Font Creator Web Site is of course another question.
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- Moderator
- Posts: 11155
- Joined: Fri Oct 04, 2002 12:41 am
- Location: Bilthoven, The Netherlands
- Contact:
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- Moderator
- Posts: 11155
- Joined: Fri Oct 04, 2002 12:41 am
- Location: Bilthoven, The Netherlands
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As the subtitle of the General Font Discussions forum says:
So for example this question would have been appropriate:
Do you use ligatures and swash characters in your documents?
So a first post should ask one short but understandable question, that invites other people to respond to your post.Post general font related questions (e.g. how to install, convert and use fonts) and requests (looking for fonts, designers etc.) here.
So for example this question would have been appropriate:
Do you use ligatures and swash characters in your documents?