![]() ![]() ![]() Originally made available in September 1996, the Georgia typeface family was released in an extended version in October 1997. The bold weight of the typeface has been similarly carefully designed, to ensure that it is always heavier than the regular weight an important consideration at small sizes on the screen, where it is often necessary to distinguish between the two. Unlike many contemporary fonts, it is a true italic, containing such characters as the single-storeyed lowercase a and g. Georgia's accompanying italic is a graceful, flowing font, the design of which entirely masks the difficulty of creating an italic for the screen. ![]() In Georgia, the uppercase characters are lightened, the x-height is increased, the ascenders rise above the cap height, and the numerals, often cut with a high degree of stress, have been evened out and made slightly non-aligning - a characteristic that imparts a flavor of individuality to any page set in Georgia. To create a font tailored for on-screen display, Carter had to make several departures from the Scotch mold. The influence of the Scotch model on Georgia is most clearly seen in the horizontal top serifs of the lowercase b, d, h, k and l, and by the flat top of the lowercase t, a typographic allusion to the typeface's roots in Didot. Carter admits that he had always admired Scotch, particularly in its early forms as cut by Richard Austin for Bell and Miller. At the time he started Georgia he had been working on a new retail family called Miller, which is a version of Scotch Roman. Carter acknowledges the influence of Richard Austin's early nineteenth-century cut of Scotch Roman on the design of his letterforms. At high resolutions and larger sizes on screen, it's evident that Georgia's ancestory is essentially that of Didot and - most noticeably - of Scotch Roman. In Georgia, Carter has successfully managed to create a typeface family which combines high legibility with character and charm. This is as much testament to the skill of the typeface's designer, Matthew Carter, as it is to any intrinsic quality of the face's design, since the small pixel spaces of the screen can be a harrowing canvas for any type designer. Even at small sizes the face exudes a sense of friendliness a feeling of intimacy many would argue has been eroded from Times New Roman through overuse. Use of them does not imply any affiliation with or endorsement by them.Although inspired by the need for - and providing - clarity at low resolutions on the screen, Georgia is a typeface resonant with typographic personality. All product and company names are trademarks™ or registered® trademarks of their respective holders. We are not affiliated, associated, authorized, endorsed by, or in any way officially connected with this or any other company or organization. This font is tagged: NCAA, The Sports Fonts Visit the Sports section for more free fonts similar to the Georgia Bulldogs font. In addition to football and gymnastics, the Bulldogs also compete in a variety of other sports, including basketball, baseball, and swimming and diving. The Bulldogs’ colors are red and black, and their mascot is a bulldog named Uga. The gymnastics team has won six national championships and is consistently ranked among the top teams in the country. The football team has won two national championships and produced numerous NFL players, including Herschel Walker and Matthew Stafford. The Bulldogs compete in NCAA Division I sports, primarily in the Southeastern Conference (SEC), and have a long and successful history across a variety of sports, particularly football and gymnastics. The Georgia Bulldogs are the athletic teams that represent the University of Georgia, a public research university located in Athens, Georgia. NCAA Georgia Bulldog Bold by The Sports Fonts is a font based on the Georgia Bulldogs logo. ![]()
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