Optima is a sans serif typeface. It was designed by Hermann Zapf. Some of the lines are a little wider at the ends, which looks a little like serifs but is not.

Optima
CategorySans-serif
ClassificationHumanist
Designer(s)Hermann Zapf
FoundryStempel
Linotype
Date made available1958
VariationsOptima Nova


Optima was inspired by classical Roman capital letters and the stone-carving of Renaissance period tombstones Zapf saw in Florence, Italy in 1950 on a holiday.[1]

Zapf intended Optima to be a typeface that could be used for both body text and for titles. Zapf used only this typeface in his book About Alphabets.[2]

The first release of Optima is the one used the most. Like many sans serif fonts, it has an oblique style instead of an italic.[3] In Optima nova, a later release, this is replaced by a true italic.

References

change
  1. "Optima Font" (PDF). Monotype Imaging. Retrieved February 21, 2019.
  2. "About More Alphabets". Shaw, Paul. Retrieved February 21, 2019.
  3. An oblique style has the letter forms slanting, whereas a true italic is a completely different style from the normal medium typeface.