1, serif-bold italic:
2, sans serif-bold and italic:
Development history
Italian italics was born in the printing workshop of aldous Manuti in 150 1. The original purpose was to arrange more characters on the page and reduce space.
/kloc-the handwriting used in the official records of Venice clerks in the 0 th and 5 th centuries is a sample, and the movable type carved by Francisco Griff is called an italicized prototype. Movable type made in this period is different from italics. Its capital letters are orthography (Roman script) shorter than the height of the rising part, and there are more than 60 compound words.
This font gradually became popular and was called "aldous with Italian style" by later generations. It was very popular at that time, and it was often engraved wrong. The Venetian Senate later recognized aldous's monopoly right to use, which was also recognized by the Pope at that time, but it still did not affect the rampant counterfeiting.
Then the font spread to France and began to be called "Italian style". In the1540s, Claude Gallamond and others tilted capital letters and gradually accepted them.