Eau de Garamond — a sans distilled from the essence of Garamond

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  • Christian Thalmann
    Christian Thalmann Posts: 1,999
    edited March 28
    Oh, I forgot to activate SS04: IPA support... that would have replaced the default italic /a/ with a two-storey one so as not to conflate it with /ɑ/, among other things.
  • @Christian Thalmann The ɩ U+0269 and i U+0069 should also be distinct in italic. If you use the same strategy then italic /i/ can be slanted instead of cursive with ss04.

  • Is ɩ used in IPA with any regularity? And doesn't the dot on i tell the difference? (Add to that that italic IPA isn't used often at all...)
  • Denis Moyogo Jacquerye
    edited March 29
    The ɩ was an alternative to ɪ from 1949 until is was withdrawn in 1989. However it is currently used in several orthographies. The issue is not ɩ and i as such, but ɩ and i when accented. In IPA or orthographies, vowel symbols can often carry tone marks or other marks. With i being soft dotted, it may look identical to ɩ with an acute for example: ɩ́ vs. . It would be helpful to have them clearly distinct.

    Looking at the italic a bit, a few current standard IPA characters should use slanted variants: v (confusable with ʋ, also in orthographies), θ and β (the forms seem unusual for IPA).
    You can add Latin ꞵ U+A7B5 as you have Latin χ and Greek ꭓ but Greek β U+03B2 is still mainly used in IPA in practice so the ss04 can make it look like ꞵ U+A7B5.
    The ɸ U+0278 in italic should be slanted by default. The Cyrillic ef form seems unusual in IPA.
    There’s also a problem with italic ƒ U+0192 and f in Ewe and other language orthographies using both letters.