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Digital Sans Now Font

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Digital Sans NowDesigner: Marty Goldstein
Publisher: Elsner+Flake
Digital Sans Now was developed by Marty Goldstein and published by Elsner+ Flake. Digital Sans Now consists of 37 designs and family package options. p > Digital Sans Now integrates and finishes the many varied requests and requirements by users of the previous years. By now, 36 versions for over 70 Latin and Cyrillic languages have become readily available, including Small Caps.

Digital Sans Now is also readily available as a webfont and shows, with its simplified and geometric building and construction and its purposely maintained poster-like forms in addition to with its ornamental character, the spirit of the ornamental serif-less headline typefaces of the 1970s.

The basic seriousness of other grotesque typefaces is here quelched by methods of targeted rounds. Precisely these formal breaks permit the impression that it could be used in a variety of visual applications. Brief texts, headlines and logos of all descriptions are its domain. It is since of this versatility that the typeface has actually become a preferable stylistic element, specifically in such style provinces as technology, games and sports, which, for several years now, it appears to be timeless.

Additional weights designed on the basis of the initial, from Thin to Ultra, the Italics, Little Caps and alternative characters permit distinguished "looks and feels", and, with deliberate use, give the "Digital Sans Now" broadened possibilities for expression.

The basis for the style of Digital Sans Now is a headline typeface created in 1973 by Marty Goldstein and the Digital Sans family which has actually been offered from Elsner+ Flake considering that the mid-1990s under a license agreement.

The four weights developed by Marty Goldstein, Thin, Plain, Heavy and Fat, were originally sold by the American business Visual Graphics Corporation (VGC) under the name of "Sol". Similarly, the company Fotostar International used movie font styles for 2" phototypesetting machines, these nevertheless under the name "Sun".

The initially digital adaptation had actually currently been purchased in the mid 1970s in Germany by Walter Brendel for the phototypesetting system Unitype used by the TypeShop Group, in three widths and under the name "Digital Part of the Serial Collection." Based upon the versions by VGC, Thin, Plain, Heavy and Fat, new versions were then produced with proper stroke and width adjustments for information sets for the typefaces Light, Medium and Vibrant as well as for the corresponding italics

Font Family:
· Digital Sans Now ML Thin
· Digital Sans Now ML Thin Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML UltraLight
· Digital Sans Now ML UltraLight Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML ExtraLight
· Digital Sans Now ML ExtraLight Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Light
· Digital Sans Now ML Light Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Reg
· Digital Sans Now ML Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Med
· Digital Sans Now ML Med Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Bold
· Digital Sans Now ML Bold Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML ExtraBold
· Digital Sans Now ML ExtraBold Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Black
· Digital Sans Now ML Black Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Thin
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Thin Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond UltraLight
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond UltraLight Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond ExtraLight
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond ExtraLight Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Light
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Light Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Med
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Med Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Bold
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Bold Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond ExtraBold
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond ExtraBold Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Black
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Black Italic
· Digital Sans Now ML Cond Med Demo

Tags: 70th, computer, digital, geometric, news, sans, sans-serif, science fiction, sci fi, seventieth, sol, sport, sun, technical, technique, techno

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