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Buy the font: Montara™ Std Bold Italic is available in these packages (best values are at the top)
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Specimen
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Gallery
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Languages - Beta
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OpenType Features Hover over a feature to learn more. Click a feature to filter Character Set view.- Show All Glyphs
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Access All Alternates
This feature makes all variations of a selected character accessible. This serves several purposes: An application may not support the feature by which the desired glyph would normally be accessed; the user may need a glyph outside the context supported by the normal substitution, or the user may not know what feature produces the desired glyph. Since many-to-one substitutions are not covered, ligatures would not appear in this table unless they were variant forms of another ligature.
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Case-sensitive Forms
Shifts various punctuation marks up to a position that works better with all-capital sequences or sets of lining figures; also changes oldstyle figures to lining figures.
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Fractions
Replaces figures separated by a slash with 'common' (diagonal) fractions.
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Standard Ligatures
Replaces a sequence of glyphs with a single glyph, e.g. 'fi', 'fl'. This feature is enabled by default and cannot currently be disabled.
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Ordinals
Replaces default alphabetic glyphs with the corresponding ordinal forms for use after figures.
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Proportional Figures
Replaces figure glyphs set on uniform (tabular) widths with corresponding glyphs set on glyph-specific (proportional) widths. Tabular widths will generally be the default, but this cannot be safely assumed. Of course this feature would not be present in monospaced designs.
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Superscript
Replaces lining or oldstyle figures with superior figures (primarily for footnote indication), and replaces lowercase letters with superior letters (primarily for abbreviated French titles).
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Tabular Figures
Replaces figure glyphs set on proportional widths with corresponding glyphs set on uniform (tabular) widths. Tabular widths will generally be the default, but this cannot be safely assumed. Of course this feature would not be present in monospaced designs.
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Slashed Zero
Some fonts contain both a default form of zero, and an alternative form which uses a diagonal slash through the counter. Especially in condensed designs, it can be difficult to distinguish between 0 and O (zero and capital O) in any situation where capitals and lining figures may be arbitrarily mixed. This feature allows the user to change from the default 0 to a slashed form.
| Filtered by Access All Alternates (6 glyphs)
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Pages: 1 |
| Filtered by Access All Alternates (6 glyphs)
|
Pages: 1 |