Baskerville 1757 Pro Regular

Baskerville 1757 Pro Regular
Up, and after doing some busi
Up, and after doing some business at my office abroad to Lumbard Street, about the getting of a good s…
Up, and after doing some business at my office abroad to Lumbard Street, about the getting of a good sum of money, thence home, in preparation for my …
Up, and after doing some business at my office abroad to Lumbard Street, about the getting of a good sum of money, thence home, in preparation for my having some good sum in my hands, for fear of a…
Up, and after doing some business at my office abroad to Lumbard Street, about the getting of a good sum of money, thence home, in preparation for my having some good sum in my hands, for fear of a trouble in the State, that I may not have all I have in the world…
Up, and after doing some business at my office abroad to Lumbard Street, about the getting of a good sum of money, thence home, in preparation for my having some good sum in my hands, for fear of a trouble in the State, that I may not have all I have in the world…
Up, and after doing some business at my office abroad to Lumbard Street, about the getting of a good sum of money, thence home, in preparation for my having some good sum in my hands, for fear of a trouble in the State, that I may not have all I have in the world out of my hands and so be left a beggar. Having put…
Up, and after doing some business at my office abroad to Lumbard Street, about the getting of a good sum of money, thence home, in preparation for my having some good sum in my hands, for fear of a trouble in the State, that I may not have all I have in the world out of my hands and so be left a beggar. Having put that in a way, I home to the office, and so to the Tower; about shipping of some more pressed men, and that done, away to Broad Streete, to Sir G. Carte…
Up, and after doing some business at my office abroad to Lumbard Street, about the getting of a good sum of money, thence home, in preparation for my having some good sum in my hands, for fear of a trouble in the State, that I may not have all I have in the world out of my hands and so be left a beggar. Having put that in a way, I home to the office, and so to the Tower; about shipping of some more pressed men, and that done, away to Broad Streete, to Sir G. Carteret, who is at a pay of tickets all alone, and I believe not less than one thousand people in the streets. But it is a pretty thing to observe that both there and every where else, a man shall see many women now-a-days of mean sort in the streets, but no men; men being so afeard of the press…

Example Characters

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Baskerville 1757 Pro Regular web font

Fontdeck enables you to use Baskerville 1757 Pro Regular as real text on your website, using CSS. Try it for free, pay only $12.50 per year when you are ready to go live.

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About this font

Font Family Baskerville 1757 Pro
Classification Serif » Transitional
Foundry Fountain
Designer Lars Bergquist
Opentype , , , , ,
Tags

Baskerville 1757 is an attempt to re-create John Baskerville's original type such as it was really meant to look on paper, and not in some sanitized universe of ideal shapes. This means that the proportions of the text sizes have been preserved, and the tendency to pare down hairlines and to prettify serifs and other detail work has been firmly resisted. Also, this version contains only what Mr. Baskerville himself wrote: Roman, italic and small caps, no anachronistic boldface.

Figures are lowercase or 'ranging' text figures of course. Those who occasionally need uppercase or 'lining' figures will however find them as OpenType features. Roman and italic ligatures are included, as the period design makes these not only desirable, but actually necessary.