Identifont

Fonts by Appearance

Fonts by Name

Fonts by Similarity

Fonts by Picture

Fonts by Designer/Publisher

Differences

TweetTweet Differences

Compare: and  

Century Gothic

Century Gothic

Single
The '$' (dollar) has a single line crossing the 'S'.
Closed
The '&' (ampersand) is traditional style with two enclosed loops.
Closed
The '4' is closed.
Single
The diagonal strokes of the upper-case 'K' meet at the vertical (with or without a gap).
Baseline
The centre vertex of the upper-case 'M' is on the baseline.
Round
The top storey of the '3' is a smooth curve.
Meets
The centre bar of the upper-case 'P' meets the vertical.
1-Storey
The lower-case 'a' stem stops at the top of the bowl (single storey).
Closed
The centre bar of the upper-case 'R' meets the vertical.
Straight
The tail of the upper-case 'Q' is straight.

There are more than ten differences; only the first ten are shown.

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

Show Examples

Concerto Rounded SG

Concerto Rounded SG

Open single
The '$' (dollar) has a single line which does not cross the 'S'.
Gap top
The '&' (ampersand) looks like 'Et' with a gap at the top.
Open
The '4' is open.
Bar
The diagonal strokes of the upper-case 'K' connect to the vertical via a horizontal bar.
Above
The centre vertex of the upper-case 'M' is above the baseline.
Angled
The top storey of the '3' is a sharp angle.
Crosses
The centre bar of the upper-case 'P' crosses the vertical.
2-Storey
The lower-case 'a' stem curves over the top of the bowl (double storey).
Crosses
The centre bar of the upper-case 'R' crosses the vertical.
Curved
The tail of the upper-case 'Q' is curved or S-shaped.