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Differences

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American Garamond

American Garamond

Double
The '$' (dollar) has a double line crossing the 'S'.
Closed
The '&' (ampersand) is traditional style with two enclosed loops.
Single
The diagonal strokes of the upper-case 'K' meet at the vertical (with or without a gap).
2-Storey
The lower-case 'a' stem curves over the top of the bowl (double storey).
Upright
The strokes are upright.
Horizontal
The lower-case 'e' has a straight horizontal bar.
S222
The feet of the lower-case 'm' have two serifs on each foot.
On
The tail of the lower-case 'f' sits on the baseline.
£ no loop
The foot of the '£' (pound) has no loop.

Note that the fonts in the icons shown above represent general examples, not necessarily the two fonts chosen for comparison.

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ITC Garamond Italic

ITC Garamond Italic

Single
The '$' (dollar) has a single line crossing the 'S'.
Gap top
The '&' (ampersand) looks like 'Et' with a gap at the top.
Double
The diagonal strokes of the upper-case 'K' meet in a 'T'.
1-Storey
The lower-case 'a' stem stops at the top of the bowl (single storey).
Right
The strokes are sloped right (italic, oblique, or cursive).
Curved
The lower-case 'e' has a curved bar with no straight segment.
S001
The feet of the lower-case 'm' have one serif on the right foot only, or no serifs.
Below
The tail of the lower-case 'f' descends below the baseline.
£ with loop
The foot of the '£' (pound) has a loop.