Copyright notice: |
Copyright © 2011 Linotype Corp., www.linotype.com. All rights reserved. This font software may not be reproduced, modified, disclosed or transferred without the express written approval of Linotype Corp. Vesta is a trademark of Linotype Corp. and may be registered in certain jurisdictions in the name of Linotype Corp. or its licensee Linotype GmbH. This typeface is original artwork of Gerard Unger. The design may be protected in certain jurisdictions. |
Font family: |
Vesta Pro |
Font Subfamily name: |
SemiBold Italic |
Unique font identifier: |
Linotype GmbH:Vesta Pro SemiBold Italic:2011 |
Full font name: |
Vesta Pro SemiBold Italic |
Version string: |
Version 1.00 |
Postscript name: |
VestaPro-SemiBoldItalic |
Trademark: |
Vesta is a trademark of Linotype Corp. and may be registered in certain jurisdictions in the name of Linotype Corp. or its licensee Linotype GmbH. |
Manufacturer Name: |
Linotype GmbH |
Designer: |
Gerard Unger |
Description: |
When Gerard Unger was doing the sketches for Capitolium, early in 1998, he considered proposing a sans serif for Rome based on the precursors of imperial Roman capitals. Few of these letters from the republican period have survived. They are partly geometrical, with circular Os, and have very little variation in thickness and very small serifs really not much more than thorns. It was from these letters that sans serifs were developed at the end of the nineteenth century (see Mosley, J., The Nymph and the Grot. The Revival of the Sanserif Letter, London, 1999). However, the Agenzia romana per la preparazione del Giubileo decided that a seriffed type would be more suitable for Rome. In the end he took Vesta (named after the temple of Vesta at Tivoli, the ancestral home of all sans serifs) and developed it further on his own initiative. The Roman geometry has gone, there is now a slight difference between thick and thin, and the letters are narrower. |
URL Vendor: |
http://www.linotype.com |
URL Designer: |
http://www.linotype.com/fontdesigners |
License Info URL: |
http://www.linotype.com/license |
Typographic Family name: |
Vesta Pro |
Typographic Subfamily name: |
SemiBold Italic |
Copyright notice: |
Copyright © 2011 Linotype Corp., www.linotype.com. All rights reserved. This font software may not be reproduced, modified, disclosed or transferred without the express written approval of Linotype Corp. Vesta is a trademark of Linotype Corp. and may be registered in certain jurisdictions in the name of Linotype Corp. or its licensee Linotype GmbH. This typeface is original artwork of Gerard Unger. The design may be protected in certain jurisdictions. |
Font family: |
Vesta Pro SemiBold |
Font Subfamily name: |
Italic |
Unique font identifier: |
Linotype GmbH:Vesta Pro SemiBold Italic:2011 |
Full font name: |
VestaPro-SemiBoldItalic |
Version string: |
Version 1.00 |
Postscript name: |
VestaPro-SemiBoldItalic |
Trademark: |
Vesta is a trademark of Linotype Corp. and may be registered in certain jurisdictions in the name of Linotype Corp. or its licensee Linotype GmbH. |
Manufacturer Name: |
Linotype GmbH |
Designer: |
Gerard Unger |
Description: |
When Gerard Unger was doing the sketches for Capitolium, early in 1998, he considered proposing a sans serif for Rome based on the precursors of imperial Roman capitals. Few of these letters from the republican period have survived. They are partly geometrical, with circular Os, and have very little variation in thickness and very small serifs really not much more than thorns. It was from these letters that sans serifs were developed at the end of the nineteenth century (see Mosley, J., The Nymph and the Grot. The Revival of the Sanserif Letter, London, 1999). However, the Agenzia romana per la preparazione del Giubileo decided that a seriffed type would be more suitable for Rome. In the end he took Vesta (named after the temple of Vesta at Tivoli, the ancestral home of all sans serifs) and developed it further on his own initiative. The Roman geometry has gone, there is now a slight difference between thick and thin, and the letters are narrower. |
URL Vendor: |
http://www.linotype.com |
URL Designer: |
http://www.linotype.com/fontdesigners |
License Info URL: |
http://www.linotype.com/license |
Typographic Family name: |
Vesta Pro |
Typographic Subfamily name: |
SemiBold Italic |