Originally posted by Scott Norwood
ITC Garamond has been fairly popular over the years. It is better for some large display size uses rather than book use; the lowercase characters are large in relation to its capitals. The large x-height can make it more difficult to read as body copy. ITC Garamond is the "friendliest" looking for all its rounded parts. Berthold Garamond is pretty stern looking by comparison; Adobe bundled Garamond BE in early versions of Illustrator.
I think Adobe's own Garamond Pro is arguably the best looking out of Garamonds available in digital form. It's probably the most used Garamond in professional graphics and typesetting situations due to its availability in Adobe applications. In the 2000's Adobe released the Garamond Premiere Pro family. It has some subtle, slightly more natural looking, almost calligraphic touches to it compared to the original Adobe Garamond variant. The package has 34 OpenType fonts covering everything from caption sizes to headlines. It was available as a bonus goodie for people who bought Creative Suite 2. It's also available via the Adobe Fonts service.
Bembo is also a popular typeface for body copy in books. Minion Pro, another Adobe typeface, is also popular for long document use.
Originally posted by Scott Norwood
Originally posted by Scott Norwood
Newer sans serif typefaces are becoming more specialized for their use cases. In the past most sans serif fonts would by default be geared for small point size use on printed pages. Things like ink traps were commonly incorporated into the glyph designs. When such letters are blown up to giant sizes, as they are in sign design, the ink traps become very noticeable and visually illogical. Now type designers and type companies are releasing sans serif typefaces that can be used big without any consequence. For instance, the 2010 release of New Haas Grotesk was a revival of Max Miedinger's original designs of what became Helvetica. It has separate Text and Display versions of its font weights. Monotype's 2019 release of Helvetica Now was even more ambitious, featuring Display, Text and Micro versions. The fonts also have a greater number of alternate characters and other features. I've used Helvetica Now Display on a few projects; the lettering does look good set really large.
Helvetica is well known for its use in the New York City subway way-finding sign system. Helvetica Now would be a decent upgrade. But I wish the sign panels could be taller to allow more line spacing. A lot of the signs in that sign system look very crowded.
Helvetica is not the best choice for something like traffic or highway signs due to the more "closed" nature of the letters. Typefaces like Gill Sans or Frutiger have wider openings in letters like "C" or "G." Here in the US the old Series Gothic typeface has been the default. A major update to the MUTCD manual is going to happen, which may impose greater limits on where and how the alternative Clearview Highway typeface can be used.
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