Result for 8514D681ED408F08A660D9BCE74B944964BADC69

Query result

Key Value
FileName./usr/share/doc/fonts-gfs-solomos/changelog.Debian.gz
FileSize1345
MD59B4D5D8134D6E9479C361C42F17AE103
SHA-18514D681ED408F08A660D9BCE74B944964BADC69
SHA-256EF8151D3C92986B699FF56E0BF18DCB240C4BECCCCE0346BB02FE9E7AD08E375
SSDEEP24:XFDm9p+j3KPMoDm9mcB4G3zMI/m/Es6r0rAtNt6P/nbEpqOANE3Hr7E:XFDm94j3KPMoC9mYH3zfQ6TtTo/n4MOs
TLSHT12A21D852D01BF052D2CF0F257687480230381F8789D6D262876F1CD0133A3A7B8A0C8B
hashlookup:parent-total2
hashlookup:trust60

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Parents (Total: 2)

The searched file hash is included in 2 parent files which include package known and seen by metalookup. A sample is included below:

Key Value
FileSize40820
MD57F207A6C55496E1823E5CC8BA1F88152
PackageDescriptionancient Greek oblique font From the middle of the 19th century an italic font with many calligraphic overtones was introduced into Greek printing. Its source is unknown, but it almost certainly was the product of a German or Italian foundry. In the first type specimen printed in Greece by the typecutter K. Miliadis (1850), the font was listed anonymously along others of 11pts and in the Gr. Doumas' undated specimen appeared as «11pt Greek inclined». For most of the second half of the century the type was used extensively as an italic for emphasis in words, sentences or excerpts. In 1889, the folio size Type Specimen of Anestis Konstantinidis' publishing, printing and type founding establishment also included the type as «Greek inclined [9 & 12 pt]». . Nevertheless, the excessively calligraphic style of the characters, combined with the steep and uncomfortable obliqueness of the capitals, was out of favour in the 20th century and the type did not survive the conformity of the mechanical type cutting and casting. The font has been digitally revived, as part of our typographic tradition, by George D. Matthiopoulos and is part of GFS' type library under the name GFS Solomos, in commemoration of the great Greek poet of the 19th century, Dionisios Solomos.
PackageMaintainerDebian Fonts Task Force <debian-fonts@lists.debian.org>
PackageNamefonts-gfs-solomos
PackageSectionfonts
PackageVersion1.1-6
SHA-1C32591FA8F18BFEC50ACD55209C675ED7540AB79
SHA-256092F1D038917AB8BAD7211362C114CDC0B07727A60372D9B021A2C95B541845E
Key Value
FileSize40860
MD5F1178476D61614747EF6C073C64EFA64
PackageDescriptionancient Greek oblique font From the middle of the 19th century an italic font with many calligraphic overtones was introduced into Greek printing. Its source is unknown, but it almost certainly was the product of a German or Italian foundry. In the first type specimen printed in Greece by the typecutter K. Miliadis (1850), the font was listed anonymously along others of 11pts and in the Gr. Doumas' undated specimen appeared as «11pt Greek inclined». For most of the second half of the century the type was used extensively as an italic for emphasis in words, sentences or excerpts. In 1889, the folio size Type Specimen of Anestis Konstantinidis' publishing, printing and type founding establishment also included the type as «Greek inclined [9 & 12 pt]». . Nevertheless, the excessively calligraphic style of the characters, combined with the steep and uncomfortable obliqueness of the capitals, was out of favour in the 20th century and the type did not survive the conformity of the mechanical type cutting and casting. The font has been digitally revived, as part of our typographic tradition, by George D. Matthiopoulos and is part of GFS' type library under the name GFS Solomos, in commemoration of the great Greek poet of the 19th century, Dionisios Solomos.
PackageMaintainerUbuntu Developers <ubuntu-devel-discuss@lists.ubuntu.com>
PackageNamefonts-gfs-solomos
PackageSectionfonts
PackageVersion1.1-6
SHA-106857D48EEC51C2FC81BCD8540908DAEBB4DDD8F
SHA-2564A89CF2AF4206FF9D77F5B92503C46436A8DA6D2C543636CD0163562A4468FE5