Mrs EavesMrs Eaves is a Transitional serif typeface designed by Zuzana Licko and published in 1996 through Emigre. The design was inspired by and named after wife, Sarah Eaves.
The best website for free high-quality Mrs Eaves XL Serif OT Reg fonts, with 32 free Mrs Eaves XL Serif OT Reg fonts for immediate download, and 5 professional Mrs Eaves XL Serif OT Reg fonts for the best price on the Web.
It was one of the first typefaces I learned to easily identify—the low x-height, wide proportions and generous spacing make it a distinctive face that stands out amongst other serifs. Mrs Eaves is extremely popular in the print world but unfortunately, like other Emigre typefaces, it never quite took off on the web.
It’s available in two weights—normal and bold—each with matching italics as well as small caps and petite caps styles.includes this family for both desktop and web use (with unlimited pageviews). Get the entire Adobe Fonts collection with all.
6 matches I agree that your opinion.In my way, i decide the font the first, depending on the project object and the media source (such as posters, book and web).second, using type style finder (manual book), for deciding color and fonts psychology. It is just guidance for exploring my creativity. if the clients have corporate identity their self (including fonts) my job will be easy. But it will challenging my creativity too in the same time.Third, Preparing the font result and any design components. I usually using one font and to restricting maximum three kind of fonts for each design project.Fourth, it is very important.
Using your new treatment as the new way:-)Good design to youWarmest greetingBest regards. 5 matches Hi, I'm a newbie here, but I've been dabbling in typography and font design on my own for a few years now. I have discovered a style of ornamental capital which I'm eager to find as a font. I'm not sure if it is really a font, though. It might just be fancy customised lettering.I found these capitals in a book called 'Angels: An Endangered Species'. I was actually more impressed by these capitals than by the content of the book. I just stumbled on this site, and there seem to be more than a few folks here who really know their fonts:)Okay, a little more detail on this: I've searched through the text, and these ornate caps are reserved for chapter openings (as they should be), so there are few of them.
I was only able to spot these 4 letters (some are used more than once at various places).Any ideas on this one? The engraved look of the detail makes me think that it's probably custom lettering, but with font design as intricate as it is these days, I figured even for a book that's been around since 1990, that there might be such a font. Oh, and one more thing: the typesetting of the text was done by someone in Florence, italy by the name of Simonetta Castelli. I know, it's a long shot, but I can't find anything but pages in Italian on her (hmm.
Wonder why??;) Thanks in advance for helping!David.