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CENTURY GOTHIC FONT FAMILY

Posted on  17-09-2021  by   admin

 * Century Gothic Font Family Css
 * Century Gothic Font Family Vk

Century Gothic™ font family Linotype.com. Century Gothic is based on Monotype
20th Century, which was drawn by Sol Hess between 1936 and 1947. Century Gothic
maintains the basic design of 20th Century but has. CSS font-family defines the
priority for the browser to choose the font from multiple fonts. There are 2
types of font families which you can use – Specific Font-Family – This is a
specific type of font like Arial, Verdana, Tahoma; Generic Font-Family – This is
a General Font and almost all browsers support this generic font family. Century
Gothic Complete Family Pack. Available for Desktop use. Available for Digital Ad
use. Available for e Book use. Available for Mobile App use. Available for
Server use. Available for Web use (Pay As You Go license) Purchase the desired
number of pageviews. When you've used all of your pageviews, return to Fonts.com
for more.

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CENTURY GOTHIC FONT FAMILY CSS


OVERVIEW

A design based on Monotype 20th Century, which was drawn by Sol Hess between
1936 and 1947. Century Gothic maintains the basic design of 20th Century but has
an enlarged 'x' height and has been modified to ensure satisfactory output from
modern digital systems. The design is influenced by the geometric style sans
serif faces which were popular during the 1920's and 30's. Useful for headlines
and general display work and for small quantities of text, particularly in
advertising.

File nameGothic.ttf
Gothicb.ttf
Gothicbi.ttf
Gothici.ttfStyles & WeightsCentury Gothic
Century Gothic Bold
Century Gothic Bold Italic
Century Gothic ItalicDesignersMonotype Type Drawing OfficeCopyrightTypeface ©
The Monotype Corporation plc. Data © The Monotype Corporation plc / Type
Solutions Inc. 1990-91 All Rights ReservedFont vendorAgfa Monotype
CorporationScript TagsN/ACode pages1252 Latin 1
1250 Latin 2: Eastern Europe
1251 Cyrillic
1253 Greek
1254 Turkish
1257 Windows Baltic
Mac Roman Macintosh Character Set (US Roman)
869 IBM Greek
866 MS-DOS Russian
865 MS-DOS Nordic
863 MS-DOS Canadian French
861 MS-DOS Icelandic
860 MS-DOS Portuguese
857 IBM Turkish
855 IBM Cyrillic; primarily Russian
852 Latin 2
775 MS-DOS Baltic
737 Greek; former 437 G
850 WE/Latin 1
437 US
Fixed pitchFalse


LICENSING AND REDISTRIBUTION INFO

 * Font redistribution FAQ for Windows
 * License Microsoft fonts for enterprises, web developers, for hardware &
   software redistribution or server installations


PRODUCTS THAT SUPPLY THIS FONT

This typeface is also available within Office applications. For more information
visit this page.


STYLE & WEIGHT EXAMPLES


CENTURY GOTHIC


CENTURY GOTHIC BOLD


CENTURY GOTHIC BOLD ITALIC


CENTURY GOTHIC ITALIC

Century GothicCategorySans-serifClassificationGeometricFoundryMonotypeDate
created1991Design based onTwentieth Century

Century Gothic is a sans-serif typeface in the geometric style, released by
Monotype Imaging in 1991.[1][2] It is strongly influenced by the font Futura,
but with a larger x-height.[citation needed] Its design also derives from two
other typefaces that were designed to compete with Futura.[citation needed] It
is an exclusively digital typeface that has never been manufactured as metal
type.[citation needed]


DESIGN[EDIT]

Like many geometric sans-serifs, Century Gothic's design has a single-story 'a'
and 'g', and an 'M' with slanting sides resembling an upturned 'W'. Century
Gothic has a high x-height (tall lower-case characters). Its origins (see below)
come from a design intended for large-print uses such as headings and signs, and
so it has a reasonably purely geometric design closely based on the circle and
square, with less variation in stroke width than fonts designed for small sizes
tend to show, and a relatively slender design in its default weight.


SOURCES[EDIT]

While many geometric sans-serif typefaces have been released to compete with the
popular typeface Futura, Century Gothic is perhaps unique in its origin: it
redraws one to match the design proportions of a second. Century Gothic was
created to be a substitute font for ITC Avant Garde, designed by Herb Lubalin,
and released by the International Typeface Corporation (ITC) in 1970, so a
document created in one can be displayed in the other with no change to
copyfit.[3][4] This allows it to substitute interchangeably for Avant Garde in
documents, an important feature since Avant Garde is a standard font in some
forms of the PostScript digital printing standard, and so Century Gothic allowed
Microsoft to use it in preference to paying for an ITC Avant Garde license.

Additionally, Century Gothic's design was based on Monotype's own Twentieth
Century, which was drawn by Sol Hess between 1937 and 1947 for the Lanston
Monotype Company.[5] Century Gothic is similar to ITC Avant Garde in its pure
geometry, and does not possess the subtle variation in stroke width found in
either Futura or Twentieth Century.[6] However, it differs from ITC Avant Garde
in that like Futura and Twentieth Century, Century Gothic does not have a
descender at bottom right of the 'u' (making it appear like a Greek upsilon υ),
whereas Avant Garde does. Century Gothic also has larger, rounder tittles on the
letters i and j more akin to Futura, whereas Avant Garde keeps the tittles
square and the same width as the letter strokes. Most notably, it lacks the
extreme stylistic alternates of Avant Garde, such as highly slanted letters
designed to fit together closely in kerning.[7]


DESIGN CHARACTERISTICS[EDIT]

Twentieth Century (above) and Century Gothic (below) at equalised x-height in
their default weight. Twentieth Century has features for smaller text such as
loose spacing and a solid stroke weight that narrows where curves join the
verticals. Century Gothic has a finer structure, less variation in stroke width
and sometimes wider characters, and by default tighter spacing.

ITC Avant Garde was intended as a display design for large headings and
advertisements (although it is somewhat usable for body text because of the high
x-height) and as a result Century Gothic is quite a light typeface, especially
in default weight, with the classic display typeface feature of tight spacing
and quite wide characters, in contrast to Twentieth Century which was intended
more for small-size applications with a more solid stroke weight and open
spacing.[8] While its structure is similar to Futura, its regular style is
between Futura and Twentieth Century's regular and light weights.

Century Gothic was one of several clones of PostScript standard fonts created by
Monotype in collaboration with or sold to Microsoft, including Arial (a clone of
Helvetica), Book Antiqua (Palatino) and Bookman Old Style (ITC Bookman).[9][10]
It was bundled with Microsoft Office 4.3 in 1994 and subsequently provided with
Plus! 95, Windows 98, Microsoft Works, and various versions of Microsoft Office
up to 2010.[11] A version of Century Gothic, Levenim, that includes Hebrew
alphabet characters has been included in later versions of Windows.


PRINTER INK USAGE[EDIT]

According to the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, Century Gothic uses much
less ink than other, similar sans-serif typefaces. It was found that Century
Gothic uses about 30% less ink than Arial. In order to save money that would be
spent on printer ink for other typefaces, the university reportedly switched
their default e-mail and printing typeface from Arial to Century Gothic.[12]
However, the typeface has also been found to use more paper—due to its wider
letters—meaning that the savings on ink are offset by an increase in paper
costs.[13]

Along with the serif typeface Garamond, Century Gothic is one of the two
typefaces that PrintWise, an initiative of the U.S. government's General
Services Administration, recommends U.S. government workers use for printed
documents.[14][15]


RELATED FONTS[EDIT]

Apart from Avant Garde and Futura, a number of other fonts based on Avant Garde
have been created to substitute for it in PostScript implementations. A
particular case of this is an open-sourced set of fonts developed by URW and
donated to the Ghostscript project to create a free PostScript alternative. This
includes an AvantGarde clone known as 'Gothic L'. It (or a derivative) is used
by much open-source software such as R as a system font.[16][17] A derivative of
this family known as 'TeX Gyre Adventor' has been prepared for use in the TeX
scientific document preparation software.[18]


REFERENCES[EDIT]

 1.  ^'Geometric fonts'. Linotype. Retrieved 9 May 2016.
 2.  ^'Century Gothic'. Fonts.com. Retrieved 9 May 2016.
 3.  ^Simonson, Mark. 'Monotype's Other Arials'. Mark Simonson Studio. Retrieved
     14 July 2015.
 4.  ^Gavin Ambrose; Paul Harris (1 November 2006). The Fundamentals of
     Typography. AVA Publishing. p. 145. ISBN978-2-940373-45-1.
 5.  ^David Kadavy (8 August 2011). Design for Hackers: Reverse Engineering
     Beauty. John Wiley & Sons. p. 298. ISBN978-1-119-99901-0.
 6.  ^Coles, Stephen. 'Alternatives to Futura'. Fontshop. Archived from the
     original on March 16, 2015. Retrieved 2 October 2015.
 7.  ^'Avant Garde Gothic Alternates Are Back'. Font Feed. FontShop. Retrieved 9
     May 2016.
 8.  ^Shaw, Paul. 'The Kerning Game'. Print magazine. Retrieved 9 May 2016.
 9.  ^Simonson, Mark. 'The Scourge of Arial'. Mark Simonson Studio Notebook.
     Retrieved 19 March 2016.
 10. ^Downer, John. 'Call It What It Is'. Emigre. Retrieved 20 March 2016.
 11. ^'Century Gothic - Version 2.35'. Microsoft.
 12. ^'Wis. college says new e-mail typeface will save money'. Archived from the
     original on April 6, 2010.
 13. ^Ramde, Dinesh (April 7, 2010). 'Century Gothic a font of wisdom'.
     Twincities.com. Retrieved 2014-04-01.
 14. ^'PrintWise'. Strategic Sourcing. General Services Administration. Archived
     from the original on 2014-03-29. Retrieved 2014-04-01.
 15. ^Stix, Madeleine (March 28, 2014). Teen to gov't: change your typeface,
     save millions. CNN via KOCO-TV. Retrieved March 28, 2014.
 16. ^'Fonts'. R Cookbook. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
 17. ^Horton, Nicholas. 'Specifying fonts in graphics'. SAS & R. Retrieved 7
     April 2016.
 18. ^'URW Palladio'. The LaTeX font catalogue. TeX Users Group Denmark.
     Retrieved 7 April 2016.


EXTERNAL LINKS[EDIT]

 * Media related to Century Gothic at Wikimedia Commons


CENTURY GOTHIC FONT FAMILY VK

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'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Century_Gothic&oldid=1014086885'




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