Times New Roman Windows compatible® Times New Roman OS Bold Font Information
Description
In 1931, The Times of London commissioned a new text type design from Stanley Morison and the Monotype Corporation, after Morison had written an article criticizing The Times for being badly printed and typographically behind the times. The new design was supervised by Stanley Morison and drawn by Victor Lardent, an artist from the advertising department of The Times. Morison used an older typeface, Plantin, as the basis for his design, but made revisions for legibility and economy of space (always important concerns for newspapers). As the old type used by the newspaper had been called Times Old Roman," Morison's revision became "Times New Roman." The Times of London debuted the new typeface in October 1932, and after one year the design was released for commercial sale. The Times New Roman World Version is an extension of the original Times New Roman with several other scripts like with the Helvetica World fonts. It is part of the Windows Vista system.
The following code pages are supported:1250 Latin 2: Eastern European
1251 Cyrillic
1253 Greek
1254 Turkish
1255 Hebrew
1256 Arabic
Note: The Roman and Bold versions include the arabic scripts but they are not part in the corresponding italic versions.
1257 Windows Baltic
1258 Windows Vietnamese"
Keywords
Cyrillic -OpenType, EU-Fonts, European language support, Greek-OpenType, Microsoft®, Microsoftâ®, WGL, Windows 10, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windowsâ®
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