This document contains late-breaking product information, updates, and troubleshooting tips.
Minimum system requirements
Font installation
Family information
Release Notes
Known issues
Customer care
Other resources
Windows®
Macintosh
For information on installing these fonts, see http://www.adobe.com/go/learn_fontinstall_en.
History
Antique Olive was designed by Roger Excoffon for the French typefoundry, Olive, which it issued in different weights and widths from 1962 to 1966. In France, antique is the generic term for sans serif designs. Antique Olive was initially designed to rival the popular sans serifs Helvetica and Univers, but is almost humanistic in its design approach, with no indication of a mechanical look. Although the x-height is large and the ascenders and descenders are short, the design maintains an elegant, statuesque quality. Antique Olive is a distinctive typeface that can be used in a variety of ways, from text work to display.
Menu Names And Style Linking
In many Windows® applications, instead of every font appearing on the menu, fonts are grouped into style-linked sets, and only the name of the base style font for a set is shown in the menu. The italic and the bold weight fonts of the set (if any) are not shown in the font menu, but can still be accessed by selecting the base style font, and then using the italic and bold style buttons. In this family, such programs will show only the following base style font names in the menu:
Antique Olive Std
Antique Olive Std Black
Antique Olive Std Bold Cond
Antique Olive Std Compact
Antique Olive Std Light
Antique Olive Std Nord
The other fonts in this family must be selected by choosing a menu name and then a style option following the guide below.
| Menu Name | plus Style Option... | selects this font | ||
| Antique Olive Std | [none] | Antique Olive Std Roman | ||
| Antique Olive Std | Italic | Antique Olive Std Italic | ||
| Antique Olive Std | Bold | Antique Olive Std Bold | ||
| Antique Olive Std Black | [none] | Antique Olive Std Black | ||
| Antique Olive Std Bold Cond | [none] | Antique Olive Std Bold Condensed | ||
| Antique Olive Std Compact | [none] | Antique Olive Std Compact | ||
| Antique Olive Std Light | [none] | Antique Olive Std Light | ||
| Antique Olive Std Nord | [none] | Antique Olive Std Nord | ||
| Antique Olive Std Nord | Italic | Antique Olive Std Nord Italic | ||
On the Mac OS, although each font appears as a separate entry on the font menu, users may also select fonts by means of style links. Selecting a base style font and then using the style links (as described above for Windows) enhances cross-platform document compatibility with many applications, such as Microsoft® Word and Adobe PageMaker®, although it is unnecessary with more sophisticated Adobe applications such as recent versions of Illustrator®, Photoshop® or InDesign®.
One should not, however, select a base font which has no style-linked variant, and then use the bold or italic styling button. Doing so will either have no effect, or result in programmatic bolding or slanting of the base font, which will usually produce inferior screen and print results.
For all fonts of family Antique Olive Std: version 2.035 created on Thu Aug 16 13:56:07 2007.
version 2.035 created 2007/08/16
version 1.040 created 2002/10/15
Customer Service
Adobe Customer Service provides assistance with product information, sales, registration, and other non-technical issues. To find out how to contact Adobe Customer Service, please visit Adobe.com for your region or country and click on Contact.
Support Plan Options and Technical Resources
If you require technical assistance for your product, including information on free and paid support options and troubleshooting resources, more information is available at http://www.adobe.com/go/support/. Outside of North America, go to http://www.adobe.com/go/intlsupport/. Free troubleshooting resources include Adobe’s support knowledgebase, Adobe user-to-user forums and more.
Online Resources
Adobe Type Showroom
Adobe Type Showroom - all current Read-Me files for our font families
User Forums