Reverse Italic, Backslanted, Cilati
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I’m working on a sans-serif typeface, and since the italic is simply a corrected slanted version, I decided to include a backslanted style as well.
Now, I’m unsure about the naming—should I go with Slanted and Backslanted, or perhaps Italic and Cilati? The latter has a playful twist, but Cilati sounds quite terrible in Italian, and I’m not sure how many graphic designers would recognize this unconventional naming. On the other hand, Backslanted feels like a rather long name for a style.
I’d greatly appreciate your thoughts and advice on this.
Comments
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Other traditional terms include reverse italic, contra italic, and reclined – but these aren’t any shorter than Backslanted.Cilati (“Italic” backwards) is the name of an italic script, P22 Cilati. Ohno then used the term to designate Swear’s italic styles with reverse contrast (not slant). Cilati as term for left-leaning italics was used for Theodor and Flounder.The original 2011 release of LL Brown had Reclining styles. Coperto and Arkias use Recline, while Pangram Sans uses Reclined. GT Planar goes for Retalic. Ano has Back Italic, and Origin Super Condensed, Grtsk, Loire and Nickel Gothic have Backslant. Totentanz, Magnet, Supergravity, Inge, Münchenstein Display, F37 Britain Condensed, CoFo Peshka and Blak all use Backslanted. FK Screamer Legacy additionally offers Semibackslanted.Bourrasque has 45 Ouest and 45 Est. Maybe that’s a direction for something that is both short and quickly understandable (once one has seen it)? West and East. Or even Right and Left. Most concise, but also a bit more obscure: Fwd and Bwd.6
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H&erstwhileFJ’s Turbo is “contra italic.”0
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Did someone say gelati?0
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"Linkskursiv" is the same length as "Backslanted" but considerably more fun.1
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I don’t have any plans to make a left-slanting italic, but if I were to, I would call the variant ‘Sinister’.2
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John Hudson said:Did someone say gelati?
I’m hearing Cilantro (coriander) instead of gelato : )
Croats and Slovenians have quite a few words borrowed and domesticated from Italian, and living here without strict borders has its charm—grabbing a morning coffee in Trieste (IT), enjoying lunch in Grožnjan (CRO), and ending the day with dinner back home in Ljubljana (SLO) some weekends isn’t all that rare. Small pleasures.
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“back home” !“Slovenic” ?0
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Andreas Stötzner said:“back home” !“Slovenic” ?0
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