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| Thread ID: 11863 | 2001-10-08 07:13:00 | Weird One. . who designed 'Wingdings' ?? | Guest (0) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 20542 | 2001-10-08 07:13:00 | Daughter has been doing a school project on fonts, etc . and has become fascinated with several, especially 'Wingdings . ' Despite searching all over the place I don't seem to be able to locate the originator . Can someone help out with this . . . . you'll make me look incredably computer literate too !!! | Guest (0) | ||
| 20543 | 2001-10-08 07:50:00 | All opening it in the fonts folder gives is copyright Microsoft 1992-1995. | Guest (0) | ||
| 20544 | 2001-10-08 08:12:00 | Designed by Charles Bigelow, Kris Holmes Charles Bigelow: Contemporary American type historian, professor and designer, recipient of a MacArthur Grant in 1982. Professor of Digital Typography at Stanford for several years. With partner Kris Holmes he runs the Bigelow & Holmes studio. Their most significant work is probably the Lucida font family, perhaps the first serious attempt to make type look good on low-resolution output. Lucida?s accompanying pi font, Wingdings, has long been included with Windows. Underlings of Bigelow include Carol Twombly, David Siegel, and Tom Rickner. Kris Holmes: Contemporary American type designer and President of Bigelow & Holmes alongside Charles Bigelow. The pair co-designed the Lucida font family targeted at low-resolution, and the pi font Wingdings. Kris Holmes herself has had a hand in the design of over 90 typefaces, including the ?city? fonts (Chicago, New York, Geneva, Monaco) for Apple. Those names sound fake but perhaps they are for real! |
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| 20545 | 2001-10-08 08:18:00 | Designed By Bigelow & Holmes Inc. For Microsoft Corporation - there 'ya go! found that on my hunt :-) | Guest (0) | ||
| 20546 | 2001-10-08 11:42:00 | Who thought up the name and Why that name? Can anybody read it in its natural state in a paragraph? | Guest (0) | ||
| 20547 | 2001-10-08 20:41:00 | I know the name is a take-off from the Macintosh font 'dingbats', Apple thought of it first. Like everything else about Windows. Don't worry, I am a reformed Mac user. Regards, Rob C. |
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