I like the font used on the PSE&G logo very much, but I can’t seem to place the exact font used (I’m assuming it’s a standard font available on word). Anyone have better eye’s than I?
But that’s kind of like saying that Arial isn’t far off from Helvetica, when they are clearly distinguishable fonts (one diff: Arial has slanted tops on T’s and similar letters)
In this case, the serifs on the ends of “S” and the top of the “G” don’t have a little dip to them like Times does. The G is flat on the bottom as well.
It might appear similar, but the font is definitely not the same as Times New Roman.
It’s common for wordmarks like this to use custom-designed or modified letterforms. To recreate them, I usually make the best guess I can and then tweak the outlines in Illustrator. For four characters, you could just draw them from scratch. It helps to have a feel for typography. The tagline appears to be a Baskerville italic, though it would take some trial and error to figure out which Baskerville.
This is so bizarre. I have been a PSE&G customer for decades, and don’t recall ever seeing that logo before. I had totally expected to see the logo where the inside of the “E” is an ampersand, as shown here. But then, poking around over there on their website, I am seeing your version more frequently than mine. What’s going on?
By running it through Whatthefont.com, it draws a blank (well, not quite, it shows a number of possibles but none of them are correct, the closest matches are Horsham Serial Medium and Lido STF Bold, which I doubt are free).
Which would suggest to me that it’s been hand drawn or modified from whatever font the designer started with, something which is very common in logo design.
(Qualification: I am a brand designer/typographer).