Apr 17, 2015 10:09
9 yrs ago
Russian term
Ленточная антиква
Russian to English
Art/Literary
Printing & Publishing
A typeface category/classification. The definition given in the text is a serif typeface without serifs or a sans serif typeface with marked contrast, examples are Peignot, Optima and Britannic. I can't seem to find a specific name for it in English.
All suggestions gratefully received :)
All suggestions gratefully received :)
Proposed translations
(English)
1 | stressed sans | Rachel Douglas |
4 +2 | Ribbon Antiqua | Oleg Lozinskiy |
4 | Linear Antiqua | Natalie |
Proposed translations
3 hrs
Selected
stressed sans
This doesn't help you with the "antiqua" aspect or "ленточная", but in English the class of typefaces you list is called "stressed sans serif" or just "stressed sans." And, evidently, several other things: "Various names exist for this style of face - humanist roman, stressed sans serif, serif-less roman, modified sans serif, calligraphic roman" - Lewis Blackwell, 20th Century Type, 1992.
4 KudoZ points awarded for this answer.
Comment: "Thanks again, Rachel, and thanks for the links :)"
+2
3 mins
Ribbon Antiqua
Peer comment(s):
agree |
Tatiana Grehan
28 mins
|
Спасибо, Татьяна!
|
|
agree |
cyhul
18 hrs
|
Thank you, cyhul!
|
1 day 12 hrs
Linear Antiqua
Hi Nicki, I believe the group of fonts you are looking for is the Grotesque group of sans-serifs: it is called "Lineal Grotesque" or "Linear-Antiqua" in German, hence possible transformation into "ленточный" in Russian. In any case, Peignot, Optima and Britannic all belong to the Grotesque group (Optima has some features of Humanistic group).
Peignot: http://www.identifont.com/similar?TL
Britannic: http://tinyurl.com/kev8gd8
Optima: http://tinyurl.com/p2hn6ar
Linear Antiqua: http://tinyurl.com/ovce98c
Peignot: http://www.identifont.com/similar?TL
Britannic: http://tinyurl.com/kev8gd8
Optima: http://tinyurl.com/p2hn6ar
Linear Antiqua: http://tinyurl.com/ovce98c
Discussion
In any event, Nicki, you probably have these lists, but just in case: here are some typeface classification lists in English.
http://luc.devroye.org/britishstandards.html
http://brandiboughey.com/WNM608/m11/faq/m11_faq_boughey.html
Also interesting is this on the Thibaudeau classification (follow the link on sans-serif) - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thibaudeau_classification - which is enlightening on the Antique/Antiqua confusion.
Did Russian typographic terminology come more from French, or from German, I wonder?
http://luc.devroye.org/britishstandards.html