Bozeman

Specimen
Test Drive
Open Type Features
Glyph
License

  • Basic (basic)

    Contains uppercase & lowercase letters, figures, accented characters and punctuation. These fonts also contain currency symbols ($, ¢, €, £, ¥), standard ligatures (fi, fl), common diagonal fractions (one-quarter, one-half, three-quarters), common math symbols, superscript numerals (1, 2, 3) and other symbols (including daggers, trademark, registered trademark, copyright, paragraph, litre, circled P, and "estimated" symbol, etc.).

    Latin 2 (latin2)

    Support for the following Central, Eastern and Baltic European languages [as well as Western]: Croatian, Czech, Estonian, Hungarian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Romanian, Serbian (Latin), Slovak, Slovenian and Turkish. In addition to 1252 Latin 1, these fonts support 1250 Latin 2, 1254 Turkish, and 1257 Windows Baltic.

    Oldstyle Numerals (onum)

    A.K.A., non-lining numerals, or lower case numerals

    Superscripts (sups)

    Includes a complete set of superscript figures beyond the basic superior numerals (1, 2, 3).

    Stacked Fractions (afrc)

    Includes a set of "nut" or "stacked" fractions that feature a horizontal bar separating the numerator and denominator. Only the following stacked fractions exist in fonts that Include this feature: one-half, one-third, two-thirds, one-quarter, three-quarters, one-eighth, three-eighths, five-eighths, and seven-eighths.

    Diagonal Fractions (frac)

    Includes arbitrary diagonal fractions. In addition to the common diagonal fractions found in the basic set (1/4, 1/2 and 3/4), these fonts let you type ANY diagonal fraction, such as 3/8, 7/16 and 11/32 as proper diagonal fractions.

    Extended Ligatures (liga)

    Includes extended ligatures, e.g., ffi, ffl, ff, ft, fj.

    Discretionary Ligatures (dlig)

    Rare ligatures such as st or ct, and unlike the liga feature, they are not on by default, meaning that the user would specifically have to select the feature. By contrast, the liga feature will substitute the ffi ligature, for example, whenever the letters f, f and i are typed in sequence.

    Swashes (swsh)

    Primarily swash capital letters.

    Stylistic Alternates (salt)

    This feature covers pretty broad ground, but is often used for fonts that have additional lowercase designs for a particular letter or set of letters.

    Ending Forms (end)

    Not a proper OpenType feature. Often used in conjunction with swashes and alternates, it includes a handful of letters with tails that are only appropriate when used at the end of a word.
  • Test Drive

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