Download free fonts, script fonts, serif fonts, cool fonts, sans fonts. Regular fonts Bold fonts Normal fonts Italic fonts Bold Italic fonts Roman fonts Medium fonts Oblique fonts Plain fonts Light fonts Condensed fonts Expanded fonts Book fonts Outline fonts Shadow fonts Capitals fonts. This is the page of News-Gothic-Normal font. Download News Gothic™ Std Oblique font. Download News Gothic™ Oblique, provided on Fonts.com from Linotype. News Gothic™ Oblique is available in OpenType, PostScript, TrueType for. The lighter weights of News Gothic™ were designed by Morris Fuller Benton in 1908 for American Typefounders.
Download free News Gothic Std Bold Oblique font, NEWSGOTHICSTD-BOLDOBLIQUE.OTF News Gothic Std Bold Oblique 1.018;ADBE;NewsGothicStd-BoldOblique Char map Ascii News Gothic Std Bold Oblique font Char map Unicode News Gothic Std Bold Oblique font 1. News Gothic Std 2. Bold Oblique 3. 1.018;ADBE;NewsGothicStd-BoldOblique 4.
News Gothic Std Bold Oblique 5. OTF 1.018;PS 001.001;Core 1.0.31;makeotf.lib1.4.1585 6. NewsGothicStd-BoldOblique 7. News Gothic 9. Morris Fuller Benton 11. Bold Oblique, The fonts presented on this website are their authors' property, and are either freeware, shareware, demo versions or public domain. The licence mentioned above the download button is just an indication.
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News Gothic News Gothic is a realist dated to 1908 designed by, and released by his employer (ATF). News Gothic is similar in proportion and structure to, also designed by Benton, but lighter. News Gothic, like other Benton sans serif typefaces, follows the, resembling text faces of the period, with a double-storey lower-case a and g. Also distinctive are the blunt terminus at the apex of the lowercase t, and the location of the tail of the uppercase Q completely outside the bowl. The letter forms are compact, and descenders are shallow. The typeface differs from other realist sans-serifs in its rather light weight and open letterforms, contributing to a less severe, humanist tone of voice.
For much of the twentieth century News Gothic was used in newspaper and magazine publishing with copies available on and machines for. Both companies added additional weights to the family.
For use in headlines, it was designed with condensed and extra-condensed styles. 'Gothic' was an early twentieth century term for sans-serifs, found mostly in the United States and Canada. It was also used in the UK, along with 'grotesque'. In Germany the term 'Grotesk' was used. A post-war guide (presumably c. 1958) explaining the names used by ATF for their many somewhat related 'gothic' types and highlighting their then-new News Gothic Bold. Benton's autobiographical notes list the following designs as his contributions to the family:.
News Gothic. News Gothic Condensed. News Gothic Extra Condensed ATF's 1923 specimen book also shows:. News Gothic Extra Condensed Title (a headline face) As with Franklin Gothic, the foundry expanded the line sometime later, adding two more variants:.
News Gothic Bold (1958) designed by John L. “Bud” Renshaw; Intertype had already released a bold News Gothic in a hot metal typesetting version, however, as later did Monotype.
News Gothic Condensed Bold (1965) designed by Frank Bartuska; versions also by Monotype and Intertype Both Monotype and Intertype released versions; McGrew reports that while ATF's archives contained 1912 production drawings for an oblique 'we have no record of its production'. Cold type copies Virtually all producers of cold type offered their own versions of News Gothic under different names:. News Gothic — Alphatype,. Gothstar Trade — Star/Photon. Toledo — Digital releases. Several common News Gothic digitisations. Because there is no active descendant of the American Type Founders Corporation making digital typefaces, News Gothic has been revived in digital form in many different versions from different sources.
Is a greatly expanded font family based on News Gothic by, adding additional features such as wide styles and extra-bold weights. At 80 styles, it is one of the most comprehensive digital renditions of the News Gothic style.
Its users include Newsweek, Fortune magazine, the Boston Globe and Sotheby's. Digital releases actually named News Gothic have a variety of features, often adding in weights not present in the original design or removing some less popular ones. For example, Bitstream's release is rare in including the extra-condensed styles. 's (also sold by Fontsite) is only sold in one width but in a wide range of weights and with italics for every weight, while Linotype's lacks a light weight or any condensed styles. Monotype's revival, a subset of which is included with many Microsoft products, features the condensed style but not extra-condensed, and has wider spacing than several others., and have their own versions. The version of News Gothic was extended with Cyrillic glyphs in 2005 and Greek glyphs in 2009 by Dmitry Kirsanov for ParaType, and is sold by them separately. Hamburg Serial is a lesser-known version of News Gothic by, with italics that have a one-story 'a' and 'g'.
News Gothic No. 2 is an enhanced version of News Gothic produced by the type foundry in 1984. It adds more weights to the News Gothic family than were available in other versions. Is a single-width design based on News Gothic, but differs in having true italics and a larger for use with onscreen display. It was released in 2012 as Adobe's first open-source family under the; Adobe's training material highlights it as having a more consistent on the page than the rather condensed News Gothic. News Cycle is an open-source variant by Nathan Willis based on 1908 specimens of News Gothic typeface from ATF extended with full Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic glyphs. It is an open source typeface licensed under the.
Similar designs called their similar design while the version was known as Record Gothic. Copied the face under the same name and added a variant, News Gothic Bold (1955). Copy was called Balto Gothic, while their copy of Inland Gothic No. 6 was perversely sold under the name News Gothic. In 1916, made alternate rounded characters for News Gothic Extra Condensed and the resulting face was sold by as Jefferson Gothic, which was also sold by as Tourist Extra Condensed In 1935, M.F. Benton did much the same thing for A.T.F.
And the face was called Phenix.