![]() ![]() ![]() ITC Avant Garde was intended as a display design for large headings and advertisements (although it is somewhat usable for body text because of the high x-height) and as a result Century Gothic is quite a light typeface, especially in default weight, with the classic display typeface feature of tight spacing and quite wide characters, in contrast to Twentieth Century which was intended more for small-size applications with a more solid stroke weight and open spacing. ![]() Century Gothic has a finer structure, less variation in stroke width and sometimes wider characters, and by default tighter spacing. Twentieth Century has features for smaller text such as loose spacing and a solid stroke weight that narrows where curves join the verticals. Twentieth Century (above) and Century Gothic (below) at equalised x-height in their default weight. Most notably, it lacks the extreme stylistic alternates of Avant Garde, such as highly slanted letters designed to fit together closely in kerning. Century Gothic also has larger, rounder tittles on the letters i and j more akin to Futura, whereas Avant Garde keeps the tittles square and the same width as the letter strokes. However, it differs from ITC Avant Garde in that like Futura and Twentieth Century, Century Gothic does not have a descender at bottom right of the "u" (making it appear like a Greek upsilon υ), whereas Avant Garde does. Century Gothic is similar to ITC Avant Garde in its pure geometry, and does not possess the subtle variation in stroke width found in either Futura or Twentieth Century. This allows it to substitute interchangeably for Avant Garde in documents, an important feature since Avant Garde is a standard font in some forms of the PostScript digital printing standard, and so Century Gothic allowed Microsoft to use it in preference to paying for an ITC Avant Garde license.Īdditionally, Century Gothic's design was based on Monotype's own Twentieth Century, which was drawn by Sol Hess between 19 for the Lanston Monotype Company. Century Gothic was created to be a substitute font for ITC Avant Garde, designed by Herb Lubalin, and released by the International Typeface Corporation (ITC) in 1970, so a document created in one can be displayed in the other with no change to copyfit. Please include attribution to with this graphic.While many geometric sans-serif typefaces have been released to compete with the popular typeface Futura, Century Gothic is perhaps unique in its origin: it redraws one to match the design proportions of a second. ![]() While we’ve featured typefaces and type families before such as Avant Garde and Helvetica, Gothic has become our most detailed fact sheet to date. Here is all you need to know about Gothic in one, handy infographic! However, this doesn’t mean that Gothic fonts are all heavy black letter typefaces! Several fonts were classified under this new term due to their black lettered style. The term ‘Gothic’ was first used to describe this script in 15th-century Italy, in the midst of the Renaissance, because Renaissance Humanists believed it was barbaric. But don’t assume that this is a modern font – its style is several centuries old! Are you a lover of video games like Grand Theft Auto, BioShock, and Call of Duty? You would be surprised to learn that Gothic font used in these games and several more just like them. ![]()
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