The Bitstream variation of Letter Gothic created by Roger Robertson for IBM in 1956-62, for use on IBM electrical typewriter. It is a condensed, monospaced font looking like a typewriter face, suitable for tabular product. Mostly used for slide presentations and for word processing applications, Letter Gothic is really useful for printing out software source listing, for informal office interactions and for tabular charts where alignment of columns is crucial. Besides, being a clear and easy-to-read font, Letter Gothic is popular now for screen and advertising matters. Cyrillic variation was developed for ParaType in 2000 by Gayaneh Bagdasaryan.
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