Advanced English fonts

Advanced English fonts include Gothic font, cursive English, round English, copperplate and quicksand.

Gothic font: from 1 150 to 17, it was once a popular handwriting in Europe and was used to write German until the 20th century. In Europe in the12nd century, people used it to make books on business, law, grammar and history. Of course, such a handwritten book-making process is very expensive in both material and human resources.

Fancy English: This category belongs to domestic calligraphy, and there is no such font classification abroad. Generally, it is considered to be copperplate font, round font or Spencer, which is more common in film letters and cover decoration.

Round English: a domestic saying that there is no English word related to "round" abroad. In China, round English calligraphy often refers to calligraphy, Italian style (or Italian italics and italics) and round style (domestic round style).

Bronze plate: a replica of an early sculpture. As the name implies, it is copper plate or copper plate printing. Copper plate is an English calligraphy font. Because it is first written on paper with ink, then engraved on the metal plate, and then copied and printed, it is named copper plate.

Quicksand: In the structure of the font, the cavity is relatively large, the suffix is arc-shaped, and it looks soft and restrained visually.