Fonts
Typeface or Font
A typeface (or type family) is the name of a specific collection of related fonts. In comparison, font refers to a particular weight, width, and style within that typeface. To put it in simple terms, each variation of a typeface is a font.
Lots of people say “font” when they mean “typeface.” We welcome them and we don’t think it’s pedantic at all. Wish us luck!
Serif Baskerville Bembo Bodoni Bookman Caslon Charter Crimson Didot Garamond, Sabon Janson, Kis Dutch style Minion Palatino Schoolbook, Schola Times Utopia, Heuristica (Baskerville and Walbaum as influences) Sans Serif Helvetica Univers Akzidenz-Grotesk Futura Gotham Avenir Frutiger Optima Neutraface Avant Garde Gothic Myriad Gill Sans DIN Franklin Gothic Antique OliveIt was commissioned by the British newspaper The Times in 1931.Garamond is a group of many serif typefaces, named for sixteenth-century Parisian engraver Claude Garamond, generally spelled as Garamont in his lifetime.The OG Helvetica. Univers was one of the first typeface families to fulfil the idea that a typeface should form a family of consistent, related designs.