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Printing font
Answer for the clue "Printing font ", 8 letters:
typeface
Alternative clues for the word typeface
Word definitions for typeface in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Typeface is an independent documentary film, produced by Kartemquin Films , about visual culture, technology and graphic design, centered on the Hamilton Wood Type and Printing Museum in Two Rivers, Wisconsin . Typeface the film focuses on a rural Midwestern ...
Wiktionary
Word definitions in Wiktionary
n. 1 (context typography English) The particular design of some type. A font, or a font family. 2 (context printing English) The surface of type which inked, or the impression it makes.
WordNet
Word definitions in WordNet
n. a specific size and style of type within a type family [syn: font , fount , face ]
Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
Word definitions in Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
noun EXAMPLES FROM CORPUS ▪ And, even more essential, that the typefaces you are using within the package are available on those systems. ▪ Doubleclick or open the typeface , and you get a style sheet that you can print. ▪ Fonts is really a shortcut to ...
Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
also type-face , "top of a type," 1852, from type (n.) in the printing sense + face (n.).
Usage examples of typeface.
Janson, a typeface long thought to have been made by the Dutchman Anton Janson, who was a practicing typefounder in Leipzig during the years 1668-1687.
Baskerville, a typeface designed by John Baskerville, an amateur printer and typefounder, and cut for him by John Handy in 1750.
There in the Darkness is the longer of the two chapbooks, not only in page count, but also because the smaller typeface crams more words on a page--perhaps too many, depending on your eyesight.
If the bank had kept any previous correspondence from Loden Galsworthy, it might be noted that the typeface, the writing paper, and the fountain pen nib were all a match.
I have a friend - the editor of the Lockmaster Logger - who collects typefaces and old advertising posters.
Not only had he unearthed almost everyone in Italy ever involved in art theft, correlated them with those people known to have a penchant for art, then constructed another list of those connected with organized crime, and broken it down by region (on the reasonable ground that most criminals are remarkably lazy and don't like commuting), but he had also typed his report up in two dozen typefaces, illustrated it with handsome (if largely meaningless) tables, and bound it into a properly professional-looking document some forty-five pages long, complete with references to the case files.
He clearly saw a first edition of the damned poem with title page a horrid mixture of typefaces, fat ill-drawn nymphs on it, a round chop which said Bibliotheca Somethingorother.
In typical nineteenth-century style the news items, obituaries, and social notes all resembled classified ads, and the typefaces were microscopic, suggesting that readers had better eyesight in those days.