Alrik:EB Garamond: Unterschied zwischen den Versionen
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"EB Garamond is intended to be an excellent, classical, Garamond. It is a community project to create a revival of Claude Garamont’s famous humanist typefaces from the mid-16th century. This digital version reproduces the original design by Claude Garamont closely: The source for the letterforms is a scan of a specimen known as the “Berner specimen,” which was composed in 1592 by Conrad Berner, the son-in-law of Christian Egenolff and his successor at the Egenolff print office. This specimen shows Garamont’s roman and Granjon’s italic types at different sizes. Hence the name of this project: Egenolff-Berner Garamond." | "EB Garamond is intended to be an excellent, classical, Garamond. It is a community project to create a revival of Claude Garamont’s famous humanist typefaces from the mid-16th century. This digital version reproduces the original design by Claude Garamont closely: The source for the letterforms is a scan of a specimen known as the “Berner specimen,” which was composed in 1592 by Conrad Berner, the son-in-law of Christian Egenolff and his successor at the Egenolff print office. This specimen shows Garamont’s roman and Granjon’s italic types at different sizes. Hence the name of this project: Egenolff-Berner Garamond." | ||
* [http://www.georgduffner.at/ebgaramond/ EB Garamond Homepage] | |||
* [https://github.com/georgd/EB-Garamond EB Garamond @ GitHub] | |||
* [https://fonts.google.com/specimen/EB+Garamond EB Garamond @ Google] | * [https://fonts.google.com/specimen/EB+Garamond EB Garamond @ Google] | ||
* [https://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?site_id=nrsi&id=OFL SIL Open Font License (OFL)] | * [https://scripts.sil.org/cms/scripts/page.php?site_id=nrsi&id=OFL SIL Open Font License (OFL)] |
Version vom 26. September 2022, 10:15 Uhr
"EB Garamond is intended to be an excellent, classical, Garamond. It is a community project to create a revival of Claude Garamont’s famous humanist typefaces from the mid-16th century. This digital version reproduces the original design by Claude Garamont closely: The source for the letterforms is a scan of a specimen known as the “Berner specimen,” which was composed in 1592 by Conrad Berner, the son-in-law of Christian Egenolff and his successor at the Egenolff print office. This specimen shows Garamont’s roman and Granjon’s italic types at different sizes. Hence the name of this project: Egenolff-Berner Garamond."
Für einzelne Wörter haben wir die "small caps" (SC) Variante verwendet.