Copyright notice: |
Copyright © 2014 Monotype Imaging Inc. All rights reserved. |
Font family: |
Optima LT Pro |
Font Subfamily name: |
Demi Bold |
Unique font identifier: |
Monotype Imaging Inc.:Optima LT Pro Demi Bold:2014 |
Full font name: |
Optima LT Pro Demi Bold |
Version string: |
Version 2.000 Build 1000 |
Postscript name: |
OptimaLTPro-DemiBold |
Trademark: |
Optima is a trademark of Monotype Imaging Inc. registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and may be registered in certain other jurisdictions. |
Manufacturer Name: |
Monotype Imaging Inc. |
Designer: |
Hermann Zapf |
Description: |
Optima was designed by Hermann Zapf and is his most successful typeface. In 1950, Zapf made his first sketches while visiting the Santa Croce church in Florence. He sketched letters from grave plates that had been cut about 1530, and as he had no other paper with him at the time, the sketches were done on two 1000 lire bank notes. These letters from the floor of the church inspired Optima, a typeface that is classically roman in proportion and character, but without serifs. The letterforms were designed in the proportions of the Golden Ratio. In 1952, after careful legibility testing, the first drawings were finished. The type was cut by the famous punchcutter August Rosenberger at the D. Stempel AG typefoundry in Frankfurt. Optima was produced in matrices for the Linotype typesetting machines and released in 1958. With the clear, simple elegance of its sans serif forms and the warmly human touches of its tapering stems, this family has proved popular around the world. Optima is an all-purpose typeface; it works for just about anything from book text to signage. It is available in 12 weights and 4 companion fonts with Central European characters and accents. In 2002, more than 50 years after the first sketches, Hermann Zapf and Akira Kobayashi completed Optima nova, an expansion and redesign of the Optima family. |
URL Vendor: |
http://www.monotype.com/ |
URL Designer: |
http://www.monotype.com/ |
License Description: |
This font software is the property of Monotype Imaging Inc., or one of its affiliated entities (collectively, Monotype) and its use by you is covered under the terms of a license agreement. You have obtained this font software either directly from Monotype or together with software distributed by one of the licensees of Monotype. This software is a valuable asset of Monotype. Unless you have entered into a specific license agreement granting you additional rights, your use of this software is limited by the terms of the actual license agreement you have entered into with Monotype. You may not copy or distribute this software. If you have any questions concerning your rights you should review the license agreement you received with the software. You can learn more about Monotype here: www.monotype.com |
License Info URL: |
http://www.monotype.com/ |
Compatible Full: |
Optima LT Pro DemiBold |
WWS Family Name: |
Optima LT Pro |
WWS Subfamily Name: |
SemiBold |
Copyright notice: |
Copyright © 2014 Monotype Imaging Inc. All rights reserved. |
Font family: |
Optima LT Pro DemiBold |
Font Subfamily name: |
Regular |
Unique font identifier: |
Monotype Imaging Inc.:Optima LT Pro Demi Bold:2014 |
Full font name: |
OptimaLTPro-DemiBold |
Version string: |
Version 2.000 Build 1000 |
Postscript name: |
OptimaLTPro-DemiBold |
Trademark: |
Optima is a trademark of Monotype Imaging Inc. registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and may be registered in certain other jurisdictions. |
Manufacturer Name: |
Monotype Imaging Inc. |
Designer: |
Hermann Zapf |
Description: |
Optima was designed by Hermann Zapf and is his most successful typeface. In 1950, Zapf made his first sketches while visiting the Santa Croce church in Florence. He sketched letters from grave plates that had been cut about 1530, and as he had no other paper with him at the time, the sketches were done on two 1000 lire bank notes. These letters from the floor of the church inspired Optima, a typeface that is classically roman in proportion and character, but without serifs. The letterforms were designed in the proportions of the Golden Ratio. In 1952, after careful legibility testing, the first drawings were finished. The type was cut by the famous punchcutter August Rosenberger at the D. Stempel AG typefoundry in Frankfurt. Optima was produced in matrices for the Linotype typesetting machines and released in 1958. With the clear, simple elegance of its sans serif forms and the warmly human touches of its tapering stems, this family has proved popular around the world. Optima is an all-purpose typeface; it works for just about anything from book text to signage. It is available in 12 weights and 4 companion fonts with Central European characters and accents. In 2002, more than 50 years after the first sketches, Hermann Zapf and Akira Kobayashi completed Optima nova, an expansion and redesign of the Optima family. |
URL Vendor: |
http://www.monotype.com/ |
URL Designer: |
http://www.monotype.com/ |
License Description: |
This font software is the property of Monotype Imaging Inc., or one of its affiliated entities (collectively, Monotype) and its use by you is covered under the terms of a license agreement. You have obtained this font software either directly from Monotype or together with software distributed by one of the licensees of Monotype. This software is a valuable asset of Monotype. Unless you have entered into a specific license agreement granting you additional rights, your use of this software is limited by the terms of the actual license agreement you have entered into with Monotype. You may not copy or distribute this software. If you have any questions concerning your rights you should review the license agreement you received with the software. You can learn more about Monotype here: www.monotype.com |
License Info URL: |
http://www.monotype.com/ |
Typographic Family name: |
Optima LT Pro |
Typographic Subfamily name: |
Demi Bold |
WWS Family Name: |
Optima LT Pro |
WWS Subfamily Name: |
SemiBold |