A very attractive italic with a surprising slight incline followed in 1985, and the rest was history. Albertan became a Canadian text classic. Though Jim kept producing additional material (small caps and light fonts in the 1990s, bold fonts in the mid 2000s) to expand Albertan into a cohesive family, he became too busy with his other typefaces and press work, and the shape of the family remained in questionable limbo until Jim's death in 2010.
In the summer of 2012, after the repatriation of Jim's typefaces, the Canada Type designers set out to turn Albertan into the kind of family Jim would have been proud of, so they spent over seven months meticulously correcting and remastering the Albertan fonts, then expanding the family with new weights and tremendous glyph sets. This new Albertan Pro family is 14 fonts, each containing over 670 glyphs. Six formidable weights and an inline set, along with their true italic counterparts, are suitable to accommodate an enormous variety of text and display applications. Advanced typography features throughout all fonts include small caps, comprehensive ligature sets, stylistic alternates, six kinds of figures, automatic fractions, ordinals, case-sensitive forms, extended Latin language support and all-encompassing class-based kerning.
20% of the Albertan Pro family's revenues will be donated to the Canada Type Scholarship Fund, supporting higher typography education in Canada.
Font Family:
· Albertan Pro Light
· Albertan Pro Light Italic
· Albertan Pro
· Albertan Pro Italic
· Albertan Pro Book
· Albertan Pro Book Italic
· Albertan Pro Medium
· Albertan Pro Medium Italic
· Albertan Pro SemiBold
· Albertan Pro SemiBold Italic
· Albertan Pro Bold
· Albertan Pro Bold Italic
· Albertan Pro Inline
· Albertan Pro Inline Italic
File Size: 17.3 MB