Difference between revisions 86000953 and 86089515 on enwiki

[[Image:TNRspecAI.svg|right|thumb|250px|'''Times New Roman''' a serif typeface designed 1931–1932 by Stanley Morison, Starling Burgess, and Victor Largent for the Montotype Corporation. It was commissioned by the London ''Times'' to address the problems of high-speed printing on low quality newsprint.]]
[[Image:TimesandGeorgia.svg|right|thumb|250px|'''Size and spacing comparisons''' of the Georgia and Times New Roman typefaces.]]

'''Times New Roman''' is a [[serif]] [[typeface]] commissioned by ''[[The Times]]'' ([[London]]) newspaper in [[1931]] and designed by [[Stanley Morison]] together with Starling Burgess and Victor Lardent. It was first issued by the [[Monotype Corporation]] in [[1932]]. Although no longer used by ''The Times,'', it is still widely used for book typography.

Because of its ubiquitous nature, Times New Roman has been influential in the subsequent development of a number of serif typefaces both before and after the start of the digital-font era.  One notable example is [[Georgia (typeface)|Georgia]], shown at right, which has very similar stroke shapes to Times New Roman but wider serifs.

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