Where most typefaces are created by simply one individual, several individuals have actually been involved in perfecting Cheltenham over the times. In 1896, the architect Bertram Grosvenor Goodhue developed the preliminary style for Ingalls Kimball at the Cheltenham Press. Simply a few years later on, Morris Fuller Benton developed a full household of Cheltenhams for ATF. This is the basis of the style we have today.
In 1975, Tony Stan restored this traditional typeface and did what was traditional at the time: increase the x-height and make the Cheltenham household more routine. SoftMaker upgraded the design yet once again in 2012. The outcome is Cheltenham Pro, a typeface that is remarkably legible and holds up even in adverse printing conditions.
SoftMaker's Cheltenham Pro typeface family contains OpenType design tables for sophisticated typography. It likewise includes a big character set that covers not just Western European languages, however also includes Main European, Baltic, Croatian, Slovene, Romanian, and Turkish characters. Case-sensitive punctuation indications for all-caps titles are included in addition to numerous portions, a substantial set of ligatures, and separate sets of tabular and proportional digits.