The Adobe Originals program is a series of digital typefaces created by Adobe Systems from 1989 for professional use, intended to be of extremely high design quality while offering a large feature set across many languages. Many are strongly influenced by research into classic designs from the past and calligraphy. Adobe Originals fonts are sold separately or with Adobe products such as InDesign.
Adobe Originals fonts tend to offer an extensive feature set through the OpenType font format, such as optical sizes, automatic ligature insertion, small capitals, swashes, text and lining figures and kerning pair sets to fine-tune character spacing. They are accordingly common choices in fine printing and book design. [1]
The Originals program was established in 1989, when Sumner Stone hired font designers Carol Twombly and Robert Slimbach. This period saw the growth of desktop publishing, at a point when printing and design was becoming more accessible. Adobe already had contracts to digitise and sell fonts by companies such as ITC, but felt that many of these designs had a somewhat dated appearance. [2] [3]
Early typefaces released included Utopia and Adobe Garamond, a reinterpretation of the Roman types of Claude Garamond and the italics of Robert Granjon. Slimbach developed the design to have a timeless, accurate appearance through visiting the Plantin-Moretus Museum in Antwerp and seeing books and original printing equipment from the 16th century. [4] [5] A parallel Adobe Originals program was developed to provide Japanese-language fonts, including the works of such designers as Masahiko Kozuka and Ryoko Nishizuka. [6]
A particularly large group of Adobe designs was inspired by the decorative wood types of the nineteenth century. These were given names after types of wood and tree. [7] [8]
The series also includes a large number of eccentric display designs, some resembling the grunge typography movement of the 1990s, which used awkward and science-fiction style letterforms. [9] [10]
Adobe has published fewer original designs since around 2000, publishing other companies' designs through its Adobe Fonts (formerly Typekit) online sales program for Web fonts (and more recently, desktop fonts as well). However, the company still does publish original designs, including Thomas Phinney's Hypatia Sans and Slimbach's recent Trajan Sans, Adobe Text, Arno and Acumin. [11] Several of these are very large designs with complex character sets, Acumin reportedly having been in development for eight years and expanded in conception from four fonts to ninety. [12] [13] [14]
Adobe has also released a large group of fonts, the Source family, as an open-source project that can be freely redistributed.
Year of first release | Family name | Type designer(s) | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
1986 | Carta | Lynne Garell | This family was "grandfathered" by the program |
1986 | Sonata | Cleo Huggins | This family was "grandfathered" by the program |
1989 | Charlemagne | Carol Twombly | Classical all-caps design with spiky serifs. |
1989 | Cottonwood | Barbara Lind, Kim Buker Chansler and Joy Redick | 19th century wood display type design. |
1989 | Adobe Garamond | Robert Slimbach | |
1989 | Ironwood | Joy Redick | 19th century wood display type design. |
1989 | Juniper | Joy Redick | 19th century wood display type design. |
1989 | Lithos | Carol Twombly | |
1989 | Mesquite | Joy Redick | 19th century wood display type design. |
1989 | Ponderosa | Kim Buker Chansler | Ultracompact French Clarendon. 19th century wood display type design. |
1989 | Tekton | David Siegel | Based on the hand lettering style of architect Frank Ching. 1993 Multiple Master, 2000 OpenType; Bold version was created by Jim Wasco in 1990; Glyphset expanded by Christopher Slye |
1989 | Trajan | Carol Twombly | Pro 3 extension by Robert Slimbach in 2011 which added more weights and support for Greek and Cyrillic |
1989 | Utopia | Robert Slimbach | Transitional design influenced by Baskerville and Walbaum. Four optical sizes added for OpenType version. A basic group of Utopia's styles (regular, italic, bold and bold italic styles of the regular size) was open-sourced in 2006. |
1990 | Birch | Kim Buker Chansler | 19th century wood display type design. Standard release included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
1990 | Blackoak | Joy Redick | 19th century wood display type design. Standard release included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
1990 | Adobe Caslon | Carol Twombly | Revival of Caslon. Three weights. Semibold weight included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
1990 | Madrone | Barbara Lind | 19th century wood display type design. Fat face Didone. |
1990 | Minion | Robert Slimbach | 1991 Multiple Master, 1992 Cyrillic, 2000 OpenType, 2018 Minion 3 |
1990 | Poplar | Barbara Lind | 19th century wood display type design. Standard release included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
1990 | Willow | Joy Redick | 19th century wood display type design. |
1990, 1991 | Adobe Wood Type Ornaments | Barbara Lind and Joy Redick | 19th century wood display type design. Decorative elements and catchwords. |
1992 | Myriad | Carol Twombly and Robert Slimbach | Humanist sans. Glyphset expanded for OpenType by Fred Brady and Christopher Slye. |
1992 | Poetica | Robert Slimbach | Script font inspired by chancery cursive designs. One weight, many stylistic alternates. |
1993 | Caflisch Script | Robert Slimbach | Based on the calligraphic handwriting of Max Caflisch. |
1993 | Critter | Craig Frazier | Zoomorphic alphabet (A=ape, etc.). Caps only. |
1993 | Cutout | Gail Blumberg | Inspired by Matisse paper cuts. |
1993 | Giddyup | Laurie Szujewska | Standard release included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
1993 | Mezz | Michael Harvey | Wedge serif slanted design, somewhat similar to Albertus. |
1993 | Mythos | Min Wang and Jim Wasco | Based on illustrations of legendary monsters. Caps-only. |
1993 | Pepperwood | Kim Buker Chansler, Carl Crossgrove and Carol Twombly | Decorative 19th century display type design. Chromatic font. |
1993 | Quake | Fryda Berd (a.k.a. Fred Brady) | Distressed serif design, reminiscent of grunge typography. |
1993 | Rad | John Ritter | Anthropomorphic alphabet (letters formed by skateboarders). Caps only. |
1993 | Rosewood | Kim Buker Chansler, Carl Crossgrove and Carol Twombly | Decorative 19th century display type design. Chromatic font. |
1993 | Sanvito | Robert Slimbach | Nearly-upright italic script font. 4 optical sizes, weights from light to bold. Creative Suite 4 registration incentive [15] Some styles included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
1993 | Studz | Michael Harvey | Based on 8th century manuscript hand and riveting. |
1993 | Toolbox | Brian Strysko | Letters formed by images of hand tools. Caps only. |
1993 | Viva | Carol Twombly | Inline serif design somewhat resembling Colonna. Many weights from light to black, three widths from condensed to extended. |
1993 | Zebrawood | Kim Buker Chansler, Carl Crossgrove and Carol Twombly | Decorative 19th century display type design. Chromatic font. |
1994 | Nueva | Carol Twombly | Quirky serif design with fine, almost slab serifs, more for display than for text use. Considered as a lowercase companion to Charlemagne. Condensed style also created. |
1994 | Penumbra | Lance Hidy | All-cap design based on Lance Hidy's poster lettering. Four styles ranging from sans to serif. |
1995 | Alexa | John Benson | Included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
1995 | Balzano | John Benson | |
1995 | Caliban | John Benson | |
1995 | Galahad | Alan Blackman | Modulated-stroke sans-serif display face, inspired by Optima and the flat-pen writing of Friedrich Neugebauer. |
1995 | Adobe Jenson | Robert Slimbach | Venetian old-style serif design. Four optical sizes. |
1995 | Jimbo | Jim Parkinson | Chunky serif display face without italic. Parkinson described it as a "happy Bodoni". |
1996 | Andreas | Michael Harvey | Outline capitals inspired by Art Nouveau lettering. |
1996 | Conga Brava | Michael Harvey | |
1996 | Cronos | Robert Slimbach | Humanist sans-serif design with stroke modulation, inspired by calligraphy. 4 optical sizes, weights from light to bold. |
1996 | Kepler | Robert Slimbach | Didone or Modern serif font. 4 optical sizes, weights from light to black, condensed/extended styles. Semicondensed Display Bold is included for free in Adobe's entry-level Typekit plan. |
1996 | Mojo | Jim Parkinson | Inspired by psychedelic lettering used for rock concert posters. |
1996 | Ouch! | Joachim Müller-Lancé | Letters inspired by hospital equipment. All caps. |
1996 | Shuriken Boy | Joachim Müller-Lancé | Science fiction-inspired techno-geometric sans, in which all interior spaces inside letters are triangular. Standard release included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
1997 | Banshee | Tim Donaldson | |
1997 | Bickham Script | Richard Lipton | Based on George Bickham's English Roundhand specimens in The Universal Penman. |
1997 | Chaparral | Carol Twombly | Old-style font with slab serif influences. 4 optical sizes, weights from light to bold. |
1997 | Ex Ponto | Jovica Veljović | Rough-edged font based on Veljović's calligraphy. |
1997 | Flood | Joachim Müller-Lancé | Italic capitals, originally written with a dried-out felt tip marker. |
1997 | Kinesis | Mark Jamra | Irregular slab serif with a near-upright italic. Resembles Joanna but more lively. |
1997 | Kozuka Mincho 小塚明朝 | Masahiko Kozuka 小塚昌彦 | |
1997 | Nyx | Rick Cusick | Stencil serif titling capitals with sharp wedge serifs and an irregular design. |
1997 | Waters Titling | Julian Waters | Titling capitals inspired by Greek monuments with fine, almost unbracketed serifs. Bold and a bold condensed style. No italics. |
1998 | Fusaka | Michael Want | Latin letters that mimic Japanese writing. Standard release included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
1998 | Immi 505 | Tim Donaldson | Standard release included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
1998 | Postino | Timothy Donaldson | Slab serif, loosely based on Courier but with a chunky, wacky design. |
1998 | Reliq | Carl Crossgrove | Letters that look like ancient inscriptions. Four styles ranging from Calm to Extra Active. |
1998 | Voluta Script | Viktor Solt | Script font based on 18th century writing. |
1999 | Blue Island | Jeremy Tankard | Letters connect in unusual ways for futuristic look. |
1999 | Strumpf | Mário Feliciano | Standard release included with Adobe's free Typekit plan. |
2000 | Calcite | Akira Kobayashi | |
2000 | Moonglow | Michael Harvey | Outline sans-serif with stroke modulation, reminiscent of Optima. Caps-only, wide range of widths and weights. |
2000 | Silentium | Jovica Veljović | Slanted type. Includes inline titling capitals. |
2000 | Warnock | Robert Slimbach | Named after John Warnock, co-founder of Adobe. Wedge-serif design. 4 optical sizes, weights from light to bold. |
2001 | Kozuka Gothic 小塚ゴシック | Masahiko Kozuka 小塚昌彦 | |
2001 | Montara | Jim Parkinson | Irregular design somewhat suggesting planks nailed together. |
2002 | Brioso | Robert Slimbach | Calligraphic old-style serif design. 4 optical sizes, weights from light to bold. |
2003 | Ryo Display りょう Display | Ryoko Nishizuka 西塚涼子 | |
2003 | Ryo Text りょう Text | Ryoko Nishizuka 西塚涼子 | |
2003 | Sava | Jovica Veljović | Calligraphic capitals and small capitals design, weights from light to black. |
2004 | Adobe Arabic | Tim Holloway | |
2004 | Adobe Hebrew | John Hudson | |
2004 | Adobe Thai | Fiona Ross, John Hudson and Tim Holloway | |
2004 | Ryo Gothic りょうゴシック | Ryoko Nishizuka 西塚涼子 | |
2005 | Garamond Premier | Robert Slimbach | An adaptation of Adobe Garamond in five optical sizes. Creative Suite 2 registration incentive. |
2006, 2009, 2010 | Kazuraki かづらき | Ryoko Nishizuka 西塚涼子 | The Std version was first developed in 2006 but it was never released. The SPN version was released in 2009. The SP2N version, which is the latest, was released in 2010. |
2007 | Arno | Robert Slimbach | Old-style serif. One of Adobe's most complex releases, in five optical sizes with support for polytonic Greek and Cyrillic. |
2007, 2010 | Hypatia Sans | Thomas Phinney | Humanist sans-serif. Creative Suite 3 registration incentive. Roman fonts 2007, kerned by Robert Slimbach & Miguel Sousa; italic fonts 2010 finalized by Paul Hunt. |
2010 | Adobe Devanagari | Fiona Ross and Tim Holloway | |
2010 | Adobe Text | Robert Slimbach | Creative Suite 5 registration incentive [16] |
2011 | Adobe Naskh | Muhammad Zuhair Ruhani Bazi, Robert Slimbach | Arabic design in the Naskh style. |
2011 | Myriad Arabic | Robert Slimbach | |
2011 | Myriad Hebrew | Robert Slimbach | |
2011 | Trajan Sans | Robert Slimbach | |
2012 | Leander Script | Viktor Solt-Bittner | |
2012 | Source Sans Pro | Paul D. Hunt | Adobe’s first open source type family. |
2012 | Source Code Pro | Paul D. Hunt | Monospaced companion to Source Sans, also open source. |
2013 | Adobe Gujarati | David Březina | |
2013 | Adobe Tamil | Fernando Mello | |
2014 | Source Serif Pro | Frank Grießhammer | Adobe’s 100th typeface family, companion to Source Sans. Transitional serif inspired by Fournier, weights from extra-light to black. Italics released 2018. |
2014 | Source Han Sans, 思源黑体 (Simplified Chinese), 思源黑體 (Traditional Chinese), 源ノ角ゴシック (Japanese), 본고딕 (Korean) | Ryoko Nishizuka 西塚涼子 | Adobe’s first open source Pan-CJK type family |
2015 | Acumin | Robert Slimbach | Neo-grotesque sans-serif, similar to Helvetica and Univers |
2015 | Adobe Kannada | Erin McLaughlin | |
2016 | Bickham Script Pro 3 | Richard Lipton | Extension to Bickham Script. Includes Cyrillic, Greek, and a broader Latin character set (incl. Vietnamese). |
2017 | Source Han Serif, 思源宋体 (Simplified Chinese), 思源宋體 (Traditional Chinese), 源ノ明朝 (Japanese), 본명조 발표 (Korean) | Ryoko Nishizuka 西塚涼子 | Adobe’s 100th typeface family, companion to source Pan-CJK. Transitional serif inspired by Fournier, weights from extra-light to heavy. |
2018 | Joschmi | Joost Schmidt, Flavia Zimbardi, Ferdinand Ulrich | |
2018 | Xants | Xanti Schawinsky, Luca Pellegrini, Ferdinand Ulrich | |
2018 | Alfarn | Alfred Arndt, Celine Hurka, Ferdinand Ulrich | |
2018 | CarlMarx | Carl Marx, Hidetaka Yamasaki, Ferdinand Ulrich | |
2018 | Reross | Reinhold Rossig, Elia Preuss, Ferdinand Ulrich | |
2019 | Adobe Handwriting | Ernest March, Frank Grießhammer, Tiffany Wardle de Sousa. | |
2019 | Flegrei | Ulrike Rausch | |
2019 | Pantelleria | Ulrike Rausch | |
2019 | Filicudi | Ulrike Rausch | |
2019 | Source Han Mono, 思源等宽 (Simplified Chinese), 思源等寬 (Traditional Chinese), 源ノ等幅 (Japanese), 본모노 (Korean) | Ryoko Nishizuka 西塚涼子 | Monospaced companion to Source Han Sans, also open source, weights from extra-light to heavy. |
2020 | Pelago | Robert Slimbach |
When Adobe converted PostScript Type 1 and multiple master fonts to OpenType Compact Font Format (CFF), they were based on the last Type 1/MM versions from the Adobe Type Library. In addition to file format change, there were numerous other changes:
As a result of the changes, Adobe does not guarantee metric compatibility between Type 1 and OpenType fonts. [17]
A typeface is the design of lettering that can include variations in size, weight, slope, width, and so on. Each of these variations of the typeface is a font.
Garamond is a group of many serif typefaces, named for sixteenth-century Parisian engraver Claude Garamond, generally spelled as Garamont in his lifetime. Garamond-style typefaces are popular and particularly often used for book printing and body text.
OpenType is a format for scalable computer fonts. It was built on its predecessor TrueType, retaining TrueType's basic structure and adding many intricate data structures for prescribing typographic behavior. OpenType is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
In typography, the x-height, or corpus size, is the distance between the baseline and the mean line of lowercase letters in a typeface. Typically, this is the height of the letter x in the font, as well as the letters v, w, and z. One of the most important dimensions of a font, x-height defines how high lowercase letters without ascenders are compared to the cap height of uppercase letters.
Myriad is a humanist sans-serif typeface designed by Robert Slimbach and Carol Twombly for Adobe Systems, released in 1992. Myriad was intended as a neutral, general-purpose typeface that could fulfill a range of uses and have a form easily expandable by computer-aided design to a large range of weights and widths.
In typography, a counter is the area of a letter that is entirely or partially enclosed by a letter form or a symbol. The stroke that creates such a space is known as a "bowl". Latin letters containing closed counters include A, B, D, O, P, Q, R, a, b, d, e, g, o, p, and q. Latin letters containing open counters include c, f, h, s etc. The digits 0, 4, 6, 8, and 9 also possess a counter. An aperture is the opening between an open counter and the outside of the letter.
Robert Joseph Slimbach is Principal Type Designer at Adobe, Inc., where he has worked since 1987. He has won many awards for his digital typeface designs, including the rarely awarded Prix Charles Peignot from the Association Typographique Internationale, the SoTA Typography Award, and repeated TDC2 awards from the Type Directors Club. His typefaces are among those most commonly used in books.
In metal typesetting, a font is a particular size, weight and style of a typeface. Each font is a matched set of type, with a piece for each glyph. A typeface consists of a range of such fonts that shared an overall design.
Carol Twombly is an American designer, best known for her type design. She worked as a type designer at Adobe Systems from 1988 through 1999, during which time she designed, or contributed to the design of, many typefaces, including Trajan, Myriad and Adobe Caslon.
Trajan is a serif typeface designed in 1989 by Carol Twombly for Adobe.
Adobe Jenson is an old-style serif typeface drawn for Adobe Systems by its chief type designer Robert Slimbach. Its Roman styles are based on a text face cut by Nicolas Jenson in Venice around 1470, and its italics are based on those created by Ludovico Vicentino degli Arrighi fifty years later.
Multiple master fonts are an extension to Adobe Systems' Type 1 PostScript fonts, now superseded by the advent of OpenType and, in particular, the introduction of OpenType Font Variations in OpenType 1.8, also called variable fonts.
A swash is a typographical flourish, such as an exaggerated serif, terminal, tail, entry stroke, etc., on a glyph. The use of swash characters dates back to at least the 16th century, as they can be seen in Ludovico Vicentino degli Arrighi's La Operina, which is dated 1522. As with italic type in general, they were inspired by the conventions of period handwriting. Arrighi's designs influenced designers in Italy and particularly in France.
Sabon is an old-style serif typeface designed by the German-born typographer and designer Jan Tschichold (1902–1974) in the period 1964–1967. It was released jointly by the Linotype, Monotype, and Stempel type foundries in 1967. The design of the roman is based on types by Claude Garamond, particularly a specimen printed by the Frankfurt printer Konrad Berner. Berner had married the widow of a fellow printer Jacques Sabon, the source of the face's name, who had bought some of Garamond's type after his death. The italics are based on types designed by a contemporary of Garamond's, Robert Granjon. It is effectively a Garamond revival, though a different name was chosen as many other modern typefaces already carry this name.
Minion is a serif typeface released in 1990 by Adobe Systems. Designed by Robert Slimbach, it is inspired by late Renaissance-era type and intended for body text and extended reading. Minion's name comes from the traditional naming system for type sizes, in which minion is between nonpareil and brevier, with the type body 7pt in height. As the historically rooted name indicates, Minion was designed for body text in a classic style, although slightly condensed and with large apertures to increase legibility. Slimbach described the design as having "a simplified structure and moderate proportions." The design is slightly condensed, although Slimbach has said that this was intended not for commercial reasons so much as to achieve a good balance of the size of letters relative to the ascenders and descenders.
Arno, or Arno Pro is a serif type family created by Robert Slimbach at Adobe intended for professional use. The name refers to the river that runs through Florence, a centre of the Italian Renaissance. Arno is an old-style serif font, drawing inspiration from a variety of 15th and 16th century typefaces. Slimbach has described the design as a combination of the period's Aldine and Venetian styles, with italics inspired by the calligraphy and printing of Ludovico degli Arrighi.
Utopia is the name of a transitional serif typeface designed by Robert Slimbach and released by Adobe Systems in 1989.
EB Garamond is a free and open source implementation of Claude Garamont’s Antiqua typeface Garamond and the matching Italic, Greek and Cyrillic characters designed by Robert Granjon. Its name is shortening of Egenolff–Berner Garamond which refers to the fact that the letter forms are taken from the Egenolff–Berner specimen printed in 1592.
A variable font (VF) is a font file that is able to store a continuous range of design variants. An entire typeface can be stored in such a file, with an infinite number of fonts available to be sampled.