
See also Anu Fonts Telugu Download References Venice (script) was a calligraphic font designed by Bill Atkinson.Toronto (slab serif) was a geometric design.San Francisco was a whimsical font where each character looked as if it was a cutout from a newspaper, creating an intentional ransom note effect.The name alluded to the inspiration, even though the Times for which Times Roman was created was that of London, not New York. New York (serif) was a Times Roman–inspired font.
Ten point Monaco is built into Old World ROM Macs.
Monaco (sans-serif, monospaced) is a fixed-width font well-suited for 9–12 pt use. Before System 6, it was known as Taliesin. Los Angeles (script) was a thin font that emulated handwriting. London (blackletter) was an Old English–style font. Nine point Geneva is built into Old World ROM Macs. Its name betrays its inspiration by the Swiss typeface Helvetica. Geneva (sans-serif) is designed for small point sizes and prevalent in all versions of the Mac user interface. Also seen on LCD screens of earlier iPod models. Chicago (sans-serif) was the default Macintosh system font in System 1–7.6. Cairo was a bitmapdingbat font, most famous for the dogcow at the z character position. Note that the logo does have a unique PostScript name in the Adobe Glyph List - /apple, mapping to F8FF. LastResort has been part of Mac OS since version 8.5, but the limited success of Apple Type Services for Unicode Imaging (ATSUI) on the classic Mac OS means that only users of macOS are regularly exposed to it. The typeface used for the text cutouts in the outline is Chicago, otherwise not included with macOS. A symbol representative of the block is centered inside the square. Top and bottom are used for one or two descriptions of the Unicode block name. On the left and right sides of the outline, the Unicode range that the character belongs to is given using hexadecimal digits. The glyphs are square with rounded corners with a bold outline. Designed by Apple and extended by Michael Everson of Evertype for Unicode 4.1 coverage, the symbols adhere to a unified design.
The symbols provided by the LastResort font place glyphs into categories based on their location in the Unicode system and provide a hint to the user about which font or script is required to view unavailable characters. The LastResort font is invisible to the end user, but is used by the system to display reference glyphs in the event that glyphs needed to display a given character are not found in any other available font.