Tooele Italic
TrueTypePersonal use
- Accents (partial)
- Accents (full)
- Euro
Tooele-Italic.ttf
Tags
Author's note
Tooele Italic font by STI Pub Companies is a free serif font with an elegant style. Its italicized nature incorporates smooth curves and soft edges that add a unique feel to classic text. Letters feel sophisticated, modern yet classic, creating an appealing look that suits both formal and informal texts.
Apply this stunning typography in magazine cover designs, headlines or sub-headlines of advertising materials, title cards for videos of various types, different styles of posters in A4 or large scale formats. Also try it out on logos and emblems for brands with premium themes like restaurants o boutiques.
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Apply this stunning typography in magazine cover designs, headlines or sub-headlines of advertising materials, title cards for videos of various types, different styles of posters in A4 or large scale formats. Also try it out on logos and emblems for brands with premium themes like restaurants o boutiques.
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Character map
Please use the pulldown menu to view different character maps contained in this font.

Basic font information
Copyright notice
Copyright (c) 2001-2011 by the STI Pub Companies, consisting of the American Chemical Society, the American Institute of Physics, the American Mathematical Society, the American Physical Society, Elsevier, Inc., and The Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers, Inc. Portions copyright (c) 1998-2003 by MicroPress, Inc. Portions copyright (c) 1990 by Elsevier, Inc. All rights reserved.
Font family
Tooele
Font subfamily
Italic
Unique subfamily identification
Tooele Italic
Full font name
Tooele Italic
Name table version
1.1.5
Postscript font name
Tooele-Italic
Trademark notice
STIX Fonts(TM) is a trademark of The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.
Designer
Description
SIL Open Font License: Tooele is a modified version of the STIX fonts and is published under the SIL Open Font License (OFL) Version 1.1 (http://scripts.sil.org/OFL).
Arie de Ruiter, who in 1995 was Head of Information Technology Development at Elsevier Science, made a proposal to the STI Pub group, an informal group of publishers consisting of representatives from the American Chemical Society (ACS), American Institute of Physics (AIP), American Mathematical Society (AMS), American Physical Society (APS), Elsevier, and Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). De Ruiter encouraged the members to consider development of a series of Web fonts, which he proposed should be called the Scientific and Technical Information eXchange, or STIX, Fonts. All STI Pub member organizations enthusiastically endorsed this proposal, and the STI Pub group agreed to embark on what has become a twelve-year project. The goal of the project was to identify all alphabetic, symbolic, and other special characters used in any facet of scientific publishing and to create a set of Unicode-based fonts that would be distributed free to every scientist, student, and other interested party worldwide. The fonts would be consistent with the emerging Unicode standard, and would permit universal representation of every character. With the release of the STIX fonts, de Ruiter's vision has been realized.
Arie de Ruiter, who in 1995 was Head of Information Technology Development at Elsevier Science, made a proposal to the STI Pub group, an informal group of publishers consisting of representatives from the American Chemical Society (ACS), American Institute of Physics (AIP), American Mathematical Society (AMS), American Physical Society (APS), Elsevier, and Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE). De Ruiter encouraged the members to consider development of a series of Web fonts, which he proposed should be called the Scientific and Technical Information eXchange, or STIX, Fonts. All STI Pub member organizations enthusiastically endorsed this proposal, and the STI Pub group agreed to embark on what has become a twelve-year project. The goal of the project was to identify all alphabetic, symbolic, and other special characters used in any facet of scientific publishing and to create a set of Unicode-based fonts that would be distributed free to every scientist, student, and other interested party worldwide. The fonts would be consistent with the emerging Unicode standard, and would permit universal representation of every character. With the release of the STIX fonts, de Ruiter's vision has been realized.
Extended font information
Platforms supported
PlatformEncoding
UnicodeUnicode 2.0 and onwards semantics, Unicode BMP only.
MacintoshRoman
MicrosoftUnicode BMP only
Font details
Created2015-01-20
Revision1
Glyph count807
Units per Em2048
Embedding rightsEmbedding for permanent installation
Family classNo classification
WeightMedium (normal)
WidthMedium (normal)
Mac styleUnderline
DirectionOnly strongly left to right glyphs + contains neutrals
Pattern natureItalic
PitchNot monospaced
Complete pack contains 4 font weights listed below:
Tooele-Italic.ttf
Tooele-Regular.ttf
Tooele-Bold.ttf
Tooele-BoldItalic.ttf
Tooele-Regular.ttf
Tooele-Bold.ttf
Tooele-BoldItalic.ttf
Tooele
TrueTypePersonal use
Tooele Bold
TrueTypePersonal use
Tooele Bold Italic
TrueTypePersonal use