Originally posted by Randy Stankey
Originally posted by Randy Stankey
Originally posted by Randy Stankey
Plenty of modern typefaces, ones with vastly larger character sets than both Highway Gothic or Clearview, will often contain one or more alternate glyphs for letters such as a lowercase "l." Helvetica Now is one such example.
Originally posted by Marcel Birgelen
Originally posted by Marcel Birgelen
"You and I both know, the name falls under trademark law, not copyright. Trademaks can be renewed ad infinitum, as long as they're still being used. That's why URW called their "Helvetica" Nimbus Sans and Microsoft calls it Arial. URW learned about trademark law the hard way..."
URW did create Nimbus Sans and it is a clone of Helvetica. You included Microsoft and Arial in the same context, implying Arial is a clone of Helvetica and that Microsoft created it.
Comment