Greta Grande Narrow
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Design Concept
Greta Serif is a contemporary typeface family specifically designed for the demands of newspaper printing, available in three optical sizes (Text, Display and Grande). Greta Grande Narrow is a collection of titling typefaces intended for large headlines (above 30pt), and therefore is designed with extreme contrast between the thick and thin, tight spacing and refined details. It is ideally suited to display use and nameplates. In combination with other Greta versions, it offers a complete palette of typographic choices.
Optical Sizes
Newspaper printing poses special challenges for font designers. Despite newspaper printing having undergone significant improvements, it is still inferior to most book printing and requires letter shapes which are resistant to the distortion that can be caused by high-speed web presses and cheap paper. Greta Serif, with its three optical sizes, is specifically designed to address this issue: the Text cuts are designed for the main text between the sizes of 8 and 11pt, Display cuts are for headlines between 14 and 21pt, and Grande is designed for the largest titles, mastheads and eye-catching graphics.
Symbols
Typotheque conducted a rigorous analysis of newspaper and magazine needs in order to compile a library of the shapes which are most useful in periodical publications. Greta family includes: an extended set of monetary symbols for financial information; two different sets of zodiac signs for horoscopes; basic geometric shapes, arrows, map markers and pointing hand symbols for infographics; weather symbols for weather forecasts; and chess figurines for chess transcripts. Greta also includes playing card symbols, stars, asterisks, punctuation ornaments, dingbats, and other miscellaneous symbols.
Numeral styles
Each weight of Greta Grande Narrow includes nine different kinds of numerals. Proportional old-style figures come as default figures in Greta. It also, however, includes lining figures, tabular numerals (both lining and old-style), small caps numerals, superior, inferior, circled and circled inverted numerals. For the running text, old-style figures work best; for capital setting, use lining figures; and for small caps, choose the specially designed Small Caps numerals applicable via OpenType layout features. When you take a licence for this font you can choose the default numeral variants inside the fonts.
- DesignKristyan Sarkis (Arabic)Peter Biľak (Armenian, Greek, Latin)Gayaneh Bagdasaryan (Cyrillic)Alexei Kassian (Cyrillic)Akaki Razmadze (Georgian)Michal Sahar (Hebrew)Smich Smanloh (Thai)
- ContributorsGor Jihanian (Armenian)Khajag Apelian (Armenian)Igino Marini (Armenian, Cyrillic, Georgian, Greek, Latin)Michelangelo Nigra (Cyrillic, Greek, Latin)
- EngineeringLiang Hai (Cyrillic, Latin)Roberto Arista (Cyrillic, Latin)
- AwardsTDC Typographic Excellence 2007, TDC Typographic Excellence 2012, TDC Typographic Excellence 2018, Granshan 2017
- Released2007
Armenian
- Armenian
Cyrillic
- Rusyn
- Kazakh
- Russian
- Abaza
- Buryat
- Dargin
- Kabardian
- Komi
- Bulgarian
- Chechen
- Kirghyz
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- Ossetic
- Serbian
- Tajik (Cyrillic)
- Ukrainian
- Belarusian
- Yakut
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- Dolgan
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- Adyghe
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- Balkar
- Karakalpak
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- Nivkh
- Enets
- Ingush
- Itelmen
- Kumyk
- Azeri (Cyrillic)
- Bashkir
- Selkup
- Nanai
- Nenets
- Lak
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- Tabasaran
- Altai
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- Even
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Georgian
- Georgian
- Mingrelian
- Laz
- Svan
Greek
- Greek (modern)
- Greek (classical)
Latin
- English
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- Marquesan
- Danish
- Dutch
- Italian
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- German
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- Ndebele (Southern)
- Quechua
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- Tahitian
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- Twi
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- Kiribati
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- Arabic transliteration
- Ladin
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- Tokelauan
- Aranese
- Cofán
- Pictograms
- Norn
- Romaji
- Old Norse
- Chiquitano
- Araona
- Cavineña
- Ayoreo
- ↑↑
Large arrows
ss02
This stylistic set replaces the simple arrows by large and heavy arrow variants. - ↑↑
Smaller arrows
ss03
This stylistic set replaces the simple arrows by smaller heavy arrow variants. - ♈♈
Figurative Zodiac Symbols
ss04
This stylistic set replaces the stylised zodiac symbols by the figurative versions. - HaHa
Small Caps
smcp
Most Typotheque fonts implement the Small Caps feature. In Adobe applications you can replace lower case letters with small caps using the keyboard shortcut (⌘ + ⇧ + H), or the OpenType menu. - HaHa
All Small Capitals
smcp, c2sc
There are two methods of applying small capitals. The first one replaces only lower case letters with small caps. The second method, All Small Caps, also replaces capital letters with small caps. It also replaces regular quotation marks, exclamation points, question marks, slashes and usually also numerals with small caps variants. - (H:(H:
Case Sensitive Forms
case
When the ‘change to caps’ function is applied from within an application (not when text is typed in caps) appropriate case-sensitive forms are automatically applied. Regular brackets, parenthesis, dashes and hyphens are replaced with their capital forms. - (1)(1)
Circled numerals and arrows
dlig
The discretionary ligature feature creates real arrows when you type the combination -> (right arrow), <- (left arrow), -^ (up arrow) or ^- (down arrow). It also creates enclosed numerals when you type numerals inside parenthesis, and inverse enclosed numerals when you type numerals inside brackets. Discretionary ligatures are off by default in Adobe applications. - fifi
Standard Ligatures
liga
Standard ligatures are those which are designed to improve the readability of certain letter pairs. For example, when this feature is activated, typing ‘f’ and ‘i’ will automatically produce the ‘fi’ ligature. Using ligatures does not affect the spelling and hyphenation of your text in any way. - 1919
Proportional Old-style Figures
onum, pnum
Typotheque fonts contain various styles of numerals within one font. Proportional Lining Figures come standard in all our headline and newspaper fonts. Their proportions are specifically designed to work well with capital letters (for example, in headlines). The proportional Old-style Figures feature changes standard figures to Old-style Figures which work well in running text, as they have the same proportions as lower case letters with their ascenders and descenders. - 1919
Tabular Lining Figures
lnum, tnum
Tabular figures are for use in tables where numerals need to be aligned vertically. Tabular figures are available as a OpenType feature and have a fixed width in all weights. Typotheque fonts include both Lining and Old-style Tabular figures. - 1919
Tabular Old-style Figures
onum, tnum
Tabular figures are for use in tables where numerals need to be aligned vertically. Tabular figures are available as a OpenType feature and have a fixed width in all weights. Typotheque fonts include both Lining and Old-style Tabular figures. - 1:01:0
Vertically centered colon
calt
This stylistic set centers the colon. Same behaviour can be triggered by the Contextual Alternative feature, which is automatically applied when colon is followed by a lining numeral or a capital letter. - 2/92/9
Arbitrary Fractions
frac
Typotheque OpenType fonts already include a number of pre-designed diagonal fractions. The fraction feature allows you to create other fractions quickly and easily. - H1H1
Superiors
sups
Replaces all styles of figures (old style, tabular, lining) and letters with their superior alternates, which can be used for footnotes, formulas, etc. Superior characters are more legible than mathematically scaled characters, have a similar stroke weight, are spaced more generously, and better complement the rest of the text. - H1H1
Inferiors
sinf
Replaces all styles of figures (old style, tabular, lining) and letters with their inferior alternates, used primarily for mathematical or chemical notation. Inferior characters are more legible than mathematically scaled characters, have a similar stroke weight, are spaced more generously, and better complement the rest of the text - ęę
Indigenous American ogoneks
In Polish and Lithuanian the ogonek under the vowels ‘a’, ‘e’, ‘u’ is placed to the right of the letters, while indigenous languages such as Navajo prefer to center the ogonek. - жж
Bulgarian Cyrillic
Bulgarian readers prefer to set text in a variation of Cyrillic that differs from the standard Cyrillic by using shapes of letters based on cursive handwriting, where letters are easier to tell apart. Typotheque fonts use standard Cyrillic forms as default, and Bulgarian Cyrillic is applied when the text is tagged as Bulgarian. When the Localised forms feature is not available, you can also apply the same forms by using a Stylistic Set. - пп
Serbian & Macedonian Cyrillic
Serbian and Macedonian Cyrillic has different preferred shapes for some italic letters, which differ from the standard Cyrillic. Typotheque fonts use standard Cyrillic forms as default, and Serbian Cyrillic italic is applied when the text is tagged as Serbian Or Macedonian. When the Localised forms feature is not available, you can also apply the same forms by using a Stylistic Set. - აა
Georgian Capital Letters
case
Georgian alphabet is unicameral, and to convert the lower case letters (Mkhedruli) the capital letters (Mtavruli), you can apply the Case feature. - մե մէ մի մխ մկմե մէ մի մխ մկ
Armenian ligatures
liga
Armenian letters often have assymetric protruding shapes that may cause spacing issues in text. Ligatures can be used to address the spacing of these letter combinations. - ΥΥ
Cursive Greek Υ
ss10
This stylistic set replaces the default capital Greek Upsilon (Υ) by a cursive variant that is different from the Latin capital Y. - հհ
Alternative Armenian հ
ss11
Greta includes two versions of the Armenian lower-case հ. The traditional version comes as a default, and modern variant can be activated by this stylistic set. - დდ
Traditional Georgian დ/ლ
ss12
Georgian lower-case and upper-case დ and ლ can take a short form based on the handwriting models. This stylistic sets replaces them with the traditional printed forms.