- sixteenth-century
Parisian engraver Claude Garamond,
generally spelled as
Garamont in his lifetime. Garamond-style
typefaces are po****r and particularly...
-
Claude Garamont (c. 1510–1561),
known commonly as
Claude Garamond, was a
French type designer,
publisher and punch-cutter
based in Paris.
Garamond worked...
- or
launched several prestigious fonts,
including Gr****et, Cochin, and
Garamont. Born in 1872,
Georges Peignot was the
fourth child of eight. His father...
- cut by Wiebking. One of Goudy's most po****r
typefaces in his lifetime,
Garamont (1921,
Lanston Monotype + 1927, Continental) was
loosely based on metal...
-
Christian Egenolff and his
successor at the
Egenolff print office. It
shows Garamont's roman and Granjon's
italic fonts at
different sizes. The Gr**** characters...
-
Senior high schools: Lycée Guy de Maup****ant,
Lycee Polyvalent Claude Garamont,
Lycee Polyvalent Anatole de
France Quilapayún,
Chilean music group forced...
- Auriol) Garamond,
roman and
italic (1926,
Henri Parmentier)
first called "
Garamont,"
based on
originals by Jean
Jannon (1580–1635) held at the Imprimerie...
- ornaments,
modelled on 16th
century ones, will also be available. "LTC
Garamont". MyFonts. LTC.
Retrieved 3
December 2015.
Third Tripartite Technical Meeting...
-
Jeanne (1974). "Claude
Garamont: New Do****ents". The Library.
Series 5. XXIX (1): 80–92. doi:10.1093/library/s5-XXIX.1.80. "
Garamont's early career: the grecs...
- (font size), or Garmond, a
traditional point-size name
Claude Garamond or
Garamont (c. 1510–61)
French type designer, for whom the
typefaces are
named Jacques...