Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
general/old-style-serif-typefaces

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Arno (typeface)


FieldValue
nameArno
styleSerif
imageArnoPro2.svg
classificationsOld-style
releasedate2007
creatorRobert Slimbach
foundryAdobe Type

Arno, or Arno Pro, is a serif type family created by Robert Slimbach at Adobe intended for professional use. The name refers to the river that runs through Florence, a centre of the Italian Renaissance. Arno is an old-style serif font, drawing inspiration from a variety of 15th and 16th century typefaces. Slimbach has described the design as a combination of the period's Aldine and Venetian styles, with italics inspired by the calligraphy and printing of Ludovico degli Arrighi.

Arno was released in five optical sizes: separate fonts for different text sizes from captions to headings. In addition, Arno contains alternate letter styles such as swash italics inspired by Renaissance calligraphy. Other supported OpenType features include proportional and tabular numbers, old style figures, subscripts and superscripts, and ordinals.

Arno includes small caps, as well as dingbat and fleuron characters inspired by early printing. Arno supports the Cyrillic alphabet, mono- and polytonic Greek, as well as Latin diacritics, including the Unicode Latin Extended character set.

TOC

Availability

Part of the Adobe Originals programme, Arno is included with Adobe Creative Suite 3, Adobe Font Folio 11 and Adobe Typekit.

Inspiration

The font family is a multi-purpose type suitable for book design, inspired by the calligraphically-inspired humanistic types of the Italian Renaissance. Slimbach described his goal as giving it "a tangible style" to be "as readable as possible".

Reception

Arno has received positive reviews. Reviewing the font for Typographica, designer Mark Simonson described it as "nicely sturdy" for body text and highlighted the sophistication of its italic alternate programming, noting that when enabled Arno "almost becomes a different typeface". Font expert Stephen Coles compared it to Requiem. Designer and calligrapher Paul Shaw suggested that its design represents a different, more "lively" approach to the neutral-looking Minion, and "yet not as loose and carefree as Brioso."

In 2011, the American Chemical Society began using Arno Pro for the body text of several of its journals, including the flagship Journal of the American Chemical Society after decades of using Times Roman.

Optical sizes

Optical sizesCaptionSmall TextRegularSubheadDisplayIntended point sizesWeights (all with italics)
8.5–10.911–13.914–21.421.5
Regular, semi-bold, boldRegular, semi-bold, boldRegular, semi-bold, boldRegular, semi-bold, boldLight, regular, semi-bold, bold

A light weight is included only in the display style. Slimbach commented that he felt that using light styles at text sizes would be a mistake because they would be hard to read.

Awards

It was a winning entry in the Type Directors Club 2007 Type Design Competition (TDC2), under the Type System / Superfamily category.

Document design expert Matthew Butterick used Arno in the print edition of his book Typography for Lawyers.

References

References

  1. "Identifont".
  2. "Typedia". [[Media Temple]].
  3. [https://fonts.adobe.com/fonts/arno#fonts-section Adobe Fonts : Arno]
  4. "Arno Pro, a new Slimbach typeface". Adobe.
  5. Twardoch, Slimbach. (2007). "Arno Pro". Adobe Systems.
  6. "Arno review". Typographica.
  7. "Comments on typophile thread".
  8. (June 2008). "Arno review".
  9. For the ''Journal of the American Chemical Society'', the change in font, along with numerous other formatting changes, took place between the 3rd and 4th issues of 2011 (vol. 133): ''J. Am. Chem. Soc''. '''2011''', ''133'', 643.
  10. (2007). "Type Directors Club : News : TDC2 2007 Results". [[Type Directors Club]].
  11. (5 July 2011). "Typography for Lawyers".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Arno (typeface) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report