POINTAGE FONT

DESCRIPTION
An all-caps font resembling Torino that has had 
Victorian-type pointing fingers, pointing right, 
superimposed so that the hands look like they are 
grasping the letters as well as pointing rightward.

FONT FORMATS
TrueType and Type 1 PostScript formats for both 
Macintosh and PC platforms are supported for this font. 
No other platforms, including Apple II and NeXT, are 
supported or condonded for this font.

WHO DID THE WORK
The font was created at Insect Bytes by David Rakowski 
on a Macintosh IIsi with Fontographer version 3.5.1. 
Supporting cast included a Microtek hand scanner, 
Adobe Illustrator, and Adobe Streamline. PC versions of 
this font were tested and tweaked by Eileen Wharmby.

COPYRIGHT NOTICE
All supported versions of the Pointage font are copyright 
(c) 1992 by David Rakowski. All Rights Reserved.

SHAREWARE TERMS AND CONDITIONS
The Pointage font was released to the public September 
19, 1992, as shareware. You may keep a copy of the font 
for your personal use for 30 days. If you keep the font 
after that period, you are honor-bound to comply with the 
shareware terms, which are as follows: you may license 
the font for your own personal use by sending a check for 
$3.03 made out to Columbia University; the check should 
be sent to Cynthia Lemiesz, Music Department, 703 
Dodge, Columbia University, New York, NY 10027 
(your check helps pay for performances of music 
composed by Columbia University students). Include a 
3x5 card on which is typed the word "Overalls."

DISTRIBUTION NOTICE
You may copy the Pointage font freely and give copies to 
your friends on disk, providing you include the Readme 
notice you are reading, on disk. User groups and 
nonprofit organizations may include this font on nominal 
charge disks, with the same restrictions. Commercial sale 
and distribution is strictly prohibited. Distribution in any 
form outside of the United States and Canada is strictly 
prohibited. This font may not be reproduced in printed 
form for any commercial publication without the 
copyright holder's specific permission.

CODA
Insect Bytes momentarily revoked its pledge never to 
release another font as shareware  because we couldn't 
resist it. We made this font for whimsical signage in the 
Columbia Music Department and can't really imagine 
any actual use for it.
