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It was developed with the free font editor FontForge and is licensed under the GNU General Public License and the SIL Open Font License. [1] In 2009, the project released Linux Biolinum: it is a sans serif font designed to pair well with Libertine. [2] It resembles Optima. In 2012, a monospaced serif font face was released, Linux Libertine Mono ...
It is licensed under the SIL Open Font License. [1] In 2009, the Linux Libertine project released Linux Biolinum: it is a sans serif font designed to pair well with Linux Libertine and Libertinus. [2] It resembles Optima. Its instantiation in the Libertinus family is as Libertinus Sans.
Liberation Sans, Sans Narrow, Serif and Mono closely match the metrics of Monotype Corporation fonts Arial, Arial Narrow, Times New Roman and Courier New [a] respectively. This means that the characters of each Liberation font are identical in width and height to those of each corresponding Monotype font.
Ubuntu is an OpenType-based font family, designed to be a modern, humanist-style typeface [1] by London-based type foundry Dalton Maag, with funding by Canonical Ltd.The font was under development for nearly nine months, with only a limited initial release through a beta program, until September 2010.
Atkinson Hyperlegible contains four styles, each of 335 glyphs: regular, bold, italics, and italics bold.It supports diacritics in 27 languages. [4]Elliott Scott of Applied Design Works and studio creative director Craig Dobie made the decision "to break a lot of rules that a lot of designers will care about", [1] for instance adding serifs to the uppercase i but not the uppercase tee [2] and ...
The fonts were originally developed by Steve Matteson as Ascender Sans and Ascender Serif, and were also the basis for the Liberation fonts licensed by Red Hat under another open source license. [2] In July 2012, version 2.0 of the Liberation fonts, based on the Croscore fonts, was released under the SIL Open Font License. [6]
The STIX Fonts project or Scientific and Technical Information Exchange (STIX), is a project sponsored by several leading scientific and technical publishers to provide, under royalty-free license, a comprehensive font set of mathematical symbols and alphabets, intended to serve the scientific and engineering community for electronic and print publication.
A humanist sans-serif font family, somewhat similar to Syntax (1968) and Frutiger (1976). It included fonts in 8 weights and 2 widths, with complementary italic fonts. A distinctive figure is the 'Q' with the detached tail, somewhat similar to that on Dwiggins' Metro; an alternate is provided for when this is unsuitable.