Identifont

Fonts by Appearance

Fonts by Name

Fonts by Similarity

Fonts by Picture

Fonts by Designer/Publisher

Differences

TweetTweet Differences

Compare: and  

FF Fago Correspondence Serif

FF Fago Correspondence Serif

Open single
The '$' (dollar) has a single line which does not cross the 'S'.
Single
The diagonal strokes of the upper-case 'K' meet at the vertical (with or without a gap).
Above
The centre vertex of the upper-case 'M' is above the baseline.
No top serif
The top stroke of the upper-case 'C' has no upward-pointing serif.
No Serifs
The centre bar of the upper-case 'E' has no serifs.
None
The foot of the '4' has no serifs.
Flat
The tail of the upper-case 'J' has a flat end or cusp.
Right
The centre vertex of the upper-case 'W' has a single right-facing serif.
Left
The bar of the upper-case 'G' is single-sided, left-facing.
S2R
The feet of the lower-case 'h' have two serifs on the left and one on the right.

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

Franklin-Antiqua

Franklin-Antiqua

Single
The '$' (dollar) has a single line crossing the 'S'.
Bar
The diagonal strokes of the upper-case 'K' connect to the vertical via a horizontal bar.
Baseline
The centre vertex of the upper-case 'M' is on the baseline.
Top serif
The top stroke of the upper-case 'C' has a vertical or angled upward-pointing serif.
Serifs
The centre bar of the upper-case 'E' has serifs.
Double
The foot of the '4' has double-sided serifs.
Ball
The tail of the upper-case 'J' has a rounded end or ball.
None
The centre vertex of the upper-case 'W' has no serifs.
Double
The bar of the upper-case 'G' is double-sided.
S22
The feet of the lower-case 'h' have two serifs on each foot.