Identifont

Fonts by Appearance

Fonts by Name

Fonts by Similarity

Fonts by Picture

Fonts by Designer/Publisher

Differences

TweetTweet Differences

Compare: and  

Nara Cursive

Nara Cursive

Touches
The upper-case 'Q' tail touches the circle.
Single
The '$' (dollar) has a single line crossing the 'S'.
Gap top
The '&' (ampersand) looks like 'Et' with a gap at the top.
Closed
The '4' is closed.
No-Stem
The upper-case 'U' has no stem/serif.
Three
The upper-case 'Y' arms and tail are separate strokes.
Normal
The upper-case 'E' is normal letter shape.
Three
The top of the upper-case 'W' has three upper terminals.
Upright
The strokes are upright.
V-shaped
The sides of the lower-case 'y' are angled (V-shaped).

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

Dorchester Script

Dorchester Script

Open
The upper-case 'Q' tail forms part of the stroke of an open circle.
Double
The '$' (dollar) has a double line crossing the 'S'.
Closed
The '&' (ampersand) is traditional style with two enclosed loops.
Open
The '4' is open.
Stem
The upper-case 'U' has a stem/serif.
Two
The upper-case 'Y' right-hand arm forms a continuous stroke with the tail.
Script
The upper-case 'E' is drawn as a single stroke (with or without loop).
Loop
The top of the upper-case 'W' has an open loop.
Right
The strokes are sloped right (italic, oblique, or cursive).
U-shaped
The sides of the lower-case 'y' are parallel (U-shaped).