This font is a recreation of Richard Wisan's "ELITEQ.LQN" font file (c) 1990 for use with the program LQMATRIX. From Mr. Wisan's comment in the LQMATRIX documentation file: "ELITEQ.LQN: resembles Epson's resident Roman font, but slightly reduced to suit elite spacing."
LQMATRIX was a font design program for use with Epson LQ [Letter Quality] 24-pin dot matrix printers and compatibles. Created by noted linguist, anthropologist, and photographer J. David Sapir, the program had its beginnings in 1985 and was published by Jimmy Paris Software; the last known version that I have been able to find is version 4.44 (1991). Mr. Sapir included font set submissions from LQMATRIX users in some of the later updates; my version includes Mr. Wisan's file. A screenshot of the program is included in the comments section below.
While the graphics mode of dot matrix printers could print rather complex pictures, it remained extremely slow for large amounts of specialized text. By uploading an LQMATRIX font file into the printer's RAM, the temporary font could be used interchangeablely with the printer's resident ROM fonts. The result was a much faster print speed with little sacrifice in quality -- plus, one could design their own special glyphs or characters to suit their needs!
This was accomplish by a sophisticated design program included with LQMATRIX, whereby users could create and save characters or symbols on a 24 vertical by 15 horizontal grid for the ASCII locations 032–126 (although 001-127 were permitted). One could even place dots in the 14 half-positions along the horizontal.
I have cleaned-up some of the curvatures and harmonized a number of glyphs (along with outright modification of a few, like W and w), yet they still adhere to the same 24 x 15 grid. The original designs can be found beginning in the "More Latin" section. Because the characters for "left single quotation mark" and "right single quotation mark" were not present in DOS, I have "created" them here for sake of completion.
The EDI Comeng font is based off the image samples of destination indicators seen on Metro Melbourne's EDI Comengs. It features uppercase letters, lowercase letters, numerals, punctuation marks, accented letters, German-specific letters, some mathematics symbols, Croatian and Slovenian-specific letters and Turkish-specific letters.
This is a (not very good) font designed to emulate the experience of a dot-matrix display; these displays are found on trains, buses, etc. This font supports most characters up to Latin-1 Supplement, and full Unicode support is on the way.
more arrows, and some fractions!
This is a clone of ElevatorInd 5.0ELEKTRON AR-LCD 1_6×6 - Re-creation of the 6×6 dot matrix font that is used in the "WinstarWG12232A" 122×32 graphic LCD display module on the "Analog Rytm"drum machine by Elektron
====================================================
I used filters to mimic the original module's dot size and dot pitch:
Horizontal brick size: 0,89
Vertical brick size: 0,91
Horizontal grid scale: 0,8
Vertical grid scale: 0,94
====================================================
This is just one of the fonts that is used in the "Analog Rytm", there is number of different font size and designs used throughout the device's OS. Used together to create clear hierarchy and structure in the individual components.
I will try to provide the remaining others as seporate fontstructions as well soon.
The other fonts:
ELEKTRON AR-LCD 2_5×8
ELEKTRON AR-LCD 3_6×6
Enjoy!
Based on the lettering used on the London Underground Northern Line 1995 Stock Passenger Information System.