Maybe better ... Once upon a time when people accepted the letter-shapes as they came from the foundries this would have been the Desyrel. Nowadays they shamelessly make the worst possible traces and make public what sort of amateurs they are.

Support your opinion, Today engage in damage to the fonts, only to optimize the time and not taking yourself to do something well . But hey that's the difference from an amateur to a professional.
Kat - and please do not forget - that the further you go from the original, the less it looks like the original. Therefore, a printed piece has ink that has spread - creating a weight or shape that did not exist.
The angles though should not change in print. Sem of the B, stem of the D, stem and bars of the E. And that G, did it get a DNA transplant? Brrrrrrrr.
Jackie, reading your comment again, in all of the millions I have let spend on print I have never ever seen deformations like these be it letterpress, rotogravure or lately offset. Had I, rest assured, I had fired the one who had allowed a deformation being produced at only 1% of what you see here. This is double sided

Edited on Oct 23, 2014 at 21:44 by koeiekat
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