User:Joseph A. Spadaro/Sandbox/Page127

Fonts

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List of script typefaces

Boxes

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Joseph A. Spadaro – American Scribe
Joseph A. Spadaro – AMS Euler
Joseph A. Spadaro – Apple Chancery
Joseph A. Spadaro – Brush Script
Joseph A. Spadaro – Cézanne
Joseph A. Spadaro – Cezanne
Joseph A. Spadaro – Coronet
Joseph A. Spadaro – Declaration Script
Joseph A. Spadaro – Declare
Joseph A. Spadaro – Edwardian Script
Joseph A. Spadaro – FIG Script
Joseph A. Spadaro – French Script
Joseph A. Spadaro – Gravura
Joseph A. Spadaro – Copperplate
Joseph A. Spadaro – Kuenstler Script
Joseph A. Spadaro – Lucida Calligraphy
Joseph A. Spadaro – Lucida Blackletter
Joseph A. Spadaro – Lucida Handwriting
Joseph A. Spadaro – Monotype Corsiva
Joseph A. Spadaro – Zapfino
Joseph A. Spadaro – Snell Roundhand
Joseph A. Spadaro – Zapf Chancery

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Joseph A. Spadaro – Alexa
Joseph A. Spadaro – Andy
Joseph A. Spadaro – Ashley Script
Joseph A. Spadaro – Balloon
Joseph A. Spadaro – Blackadder
Joseph A. Spadaro – Caflisch Script
Joseph A. Spadaro – Chalkboard
Joseph A. Spadaro – Comic Sans
Joseph A. Spadaro – Comic Sans MS
Joseph A. Spadaro – Dom Casual
Joseph A. Spadaro – Eyadish
Joseph A. Spadaro – Freestyle Script
Joseph A. Spadaro – Kaufmann
Joseph A. Spadaro – Kristen
Joseph A. Spadaro – Lobster
Joseph A. Spadaro – Lucida Handwriting
Joseph A. Spadaro – Mistral
Joseph A. Spadaro – Papyrus
Joseph A. Spadaro – Pristina
Joseph A. Spadaro – Rage
Joseph A. Spadaro – Segoe Script
Joseph A. Spadaro – Segoe
Joseph A. Spadaro – Viner Hand
Joseph A. Spadaro – Wiesbaden Swing

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Joseph A. Spadaro – Times New Roman


Blackletter (sometimes black letter), also known as Gothic script, Gothic minuscule, or Textura, was a script used throughout Western Europe from approximately 1150 until the 17th century.[1] It continued to be used for the Danish language until 1875,[2] and for German, Estonian and Latvian until the 20th century. Fraktur is a notable script of this type, and sometimes the entire group of blackletter faces is incorrectly referred to as Fraktur. Blackletter is sometimes referred to as Old English, but it is not to be confused with the Old English language (or Anglo-Saxon), which predates blackletter by many centuries and was written in the insular script or in Futhorc.


Joseph A. Spadaro – Blackletter


Joseph A. Spadaro – Black letter


Joseph A. Spadaro – Gothic script


Joseph A. Spadaro – Gothic minuscule


Joseph A. Spadaro – Textura


Joseph A. Spadaro – Old English


Joseph A. Spadaro – Olde English


Joseph A. Spadaro – Cursiva


Joseph A. Spadaro – Fraktur


More more more boxes

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Joseph A. Spadaro – Bookman Old Style


Joseph A. Spadaro – Brush Script MT


Joseph A. Spadaro – Copperplate Gothic


Joseph A. Spadaro – Edwardian Script ITC


Joseph A. Spadaro – Franklin Gothic


Joseph A. Spadaro – Franklin Gothic Book


Joseph A. Spadaro – Freestyle Script


Joseph A. Spadaro – Freestyle Script MT


Joseph A. Spadaro – Kunstler Script


Joseph A. Spadaro – MS Gothic


Joseph A. Spadaro – Old English Text MT


Joseph A. Spadaro – Palace Script MT


Joseph A. Spadaro – Parchment


Joseph A. Spadaro – Perpetua


Joseph A. Spadaro – Script MT


Joseph A. Spadaro – Showcard Gothic


Joseph A. Spadaro – Viner Hand ITC



Joseph A. Spadaro – Vladimir Script


Joseph A. Spadaro – YU Gothic


Joseph A. Spadaro – YU Gothic UI


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  1. ^ Dowding, Geoffrey (1962). An introduction to the history of printing types; an illustrated summary of main stages in the development of type design from 1440 up to the present day: an aid to type face identification. Clerkenwell [London]: Wace. p. 5.
  2. ^ "Styles of Handwriting". Rigsarkivet. The Danish National Archives. Retrieved March 26, 2017.