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More posts by @Alves566

4 Comments

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@Carla748

Looks to me like, AdobeĀ® Caslonā„¢ Regular but it's hard to see from that screen grab. Look at the capital K and lowercase fi in profit for reference.

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@Holmes874

No, it's not Georgia. It's barely Garamond Premier Pro. You can see it in the image below. The first part of image is the origina, second part is written by me on the original image and the third part is barely a text layer created by me. There is some differences about letter spacing but I think there will be no problem.

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@Turnbaugh909

www.myfonts.com/WhatTheFont/ is a great resource for identifying fonts from images. The other tool I use when WhatTheFont doesn't work is www.identifont.com/. The process is a little more tedious, but it all depends on how determined you are.

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@Martha945

While it is VERY close to Georgia, I don't believe it is. What I always do, when trying to identify fonts, is type a few words out and go through my fonts, looking for distinguishing characteristics of each font.

I did this with the image that you supplied and picked up on a few differences right away.

It's difficult to see in the shrunken image below, so I suggest you either right-click or control-click and view the image in a new tab.


You can see below that the lowercase A in Georgia (top) is slightly
different than the font below
You can also notice that the flat
part of the lowercase E in Georgia is perfectly horizontal, but in
the font you are trying to ID it slants upwards.
The bottom parts of
the Ps also look a little different to me as well.


I'm sure the pattern would continue, if I had looked any further.



That being said, I doubt anyone will actually notice a difference, so just use Georgia

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