Font's Name, Style & Sample text
 
Hadriano™ Light 
MAC Postscript
PS
-
PC Postscript
PS
-
PC Truetype
TT
-
Opentype Std  Opentype Std works with both Mac och PC.
show which languages Opentype Std supports
OPENTYPE (std)
MAC
PC
 
Hadriano™ Bold 
MAC Postscript
PS
-
PC Postscript
PS
-
PC Truetype
TT
-
Opentype Std  Opentype Std works with both Mac och PC.
show which languages Opentype Std supports
OPENTYPE (std)
MAC
PC
 
Hadriano™ Extrabold Condensed 
MAC Postscript
PS
-
PC Postscript
PS
-
PC Truetype
TT
-
Opentype Std  Opentype Std works with both Mac och PC.
show which languages Opentype Std supports
OPENTYPE (std)
MAC
PC
 
Hadriano™ Extrabold 
MAC Postscript
PS
-
PC Postscript
PS
-
PC Truetype
TT
-
Opentype Std  Opentype Std works with both Mac och PC.
show which languages Opentype Std supports
OPENTYPE (std)
MAC
PC
 
 
You Can Purchase This Font Through Our Sister Site Signum Art, Click Here
   

Hadriano™

When traveling in Paris, American designer Frederic W. Goudy did a rubbing of a second century marble inscription he found in the Louvre. After ruminating on these letterforms for several years, he drew a titling typeface in 1918, all around the letters P, R, and E. He called the new face "Hadriano" as that name was in the original inscription. Robert Wiebking cut the matrices, and the Continental Typefounders Association released the font. Goudy designed a lowercase at the request of Monotype in 1930, though he didn't really like the idea of adding lowercase to an inscriptional letterform. The lowercase looks much like some of Goudy's other Roman faces.

supplier: Linotype

Hadriano is a trademark of Monotype Imaging Inc. and may be registered in certain jurisdictions.