Showing posts with label didone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label didone. Show all posts

Download Quair™ Fonts by Alias

Download Quair™ Fonts by Alias
Download Quair™ Fonts by Alias Download Quair™ Fonts by Alias Download Quair™ Fonts by Alias



The typeface that became Quair was originally planned as an extension of our Oban typeface.

As it developed it became different enough to be a stand-alone, but connected typeface.

Quair mixes typographic and graphic reference points, most notably from market-stall trader lettering and from Thorowgood and Scotch nineteenth-century typefaces.

Quair isnt an updating or redrawing of these. It adds different ideas to make a distinctive, separate-looking typeface. More The lettering by Market stall traders to advertise their products has immediacy and economy, but is expressive and surprising.

Letter shapes that look drawn but have a feeling of being written in quite a simple, unfussy way.

Shapes are big, decorative but unrefined, Quairs lettershapes have this idea of being reduced.

They are minimal, in that they lack subtlety, but are characterful and individual.

Round and Triangle serif options highlight this idea of the letters as graphic shapes, and offer a difference in emphasis between curvy and angular.

Like Oban, Quair takes inspiration from the Thorowgood, nineteenth century headline typefaces.

These have striking and idiosyncratic drawing, with exuberent, bold letter shapes.

As with the market trader lettering their character and individuality is expressed through an economy of drawing, and the impact of the high contrast between thick and thin.

Quairs character shapes have something of the sparse, rigorous quality of Scotch typefaces.

Scotch typefaces are known for their utility aesthetic. Quair has something of this, but typographic nuance has been reduced with a simplified, graphic shape.

Modulation has been replaced with binary thick/thin. An angular, basic and inelegant look, but functional and useable.


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Download Joane Fonts by W Foundry

Download Joane Fonts by W Foundry
Download Joane Fonts by W Foundry Download Joane Fonts by W Foundry Download Joane Fonts by W Foundry



Joane mixes the elegancy of French didones, calligraphic endings and glyphic serifs, thus its features convey a warm unique style.

Moreover, its curves have been beautifully designed, and it also comes with both and engraved and deco versions, which add more versatility to the way it can be used.

Joanes is perfectly suited for magazines, branding, advertising, labels, web and packaging.

Joane is my first typeface that is world-wide published. To achieve this goal, I received essential help of W team and friends. I personally want to say thanks to Diego Aravena for the patience, good will and learning; for the friendship and support to Franco Jonas and Raúl Meza.

Because of their help I could find the treasures at the end of the process.

Ale Navarro


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Download Rion Fonts by Indian Type Foundry

Download Rion Fonts by Indian Type Foundry
Download Rion Fonts by Indian Type Foundry Download Rion Fonts by Indian Type Foundry Download Rion Fonts by Indian Type Foundry



Rion is a high-contrast modern, or Didone-style font family, with a calligraphic flourish. It is intended for typesetting headlines in editorial design settings, as well as signage, the larger texts in exhibition graphics, or any other place where you need big, elegant-looking type.

Rion takes inspiration both from straight-axis nineteenth century typefaces and pointed-pen calligraphy.

Its letterforms contain a high degree of stroke-contrast; this gives them a look of sophistication.

The family includes six weights, ranging in style from Light through Black. Each weight has both an upright font and an italic on offer. The fonts default numerals are proportionally-spaced oldstyle figures. Lining figures are also available, via an OpenType feature. Rions characters are all a bit condensed; this narrow feeling is especially present in the fonts uppercase letters.

The ascenders of the lowercase letters rise slightly above the tops of the capitals.

In the upright fonts, the a and the g are double-storied. In the italics, they are single-storied. Each font includes small caps, and 13 f-ligatures, too. Special characters in the fonts such as the hashtag and the @-symbol, as well several punctuation marks and mathematical glyphs are drawn with thin, monolinear hairline strokes, allowing them to disappear into the background somewhat, and let the real alphabetic characters shine more prominently.

Rion is the work of Barbara Bigosinska, a Polish type designer living in the Netherlands, who is a graduate of the MA Type & Media programme at the Royal Academy of Art (KABK) in The Hague.



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Download Cardillac Fonts by Hoftype

Download Cardillac Fonts by Hoftype
Download Cardillac Fonts by Hoftype Download Cardillac Fonts by Hoftype Download Cardillac Fonts by Hoftype



Cardillac, named after E.T.A. Hoffmanns literary figure, refers back to classical Didonesque, yet presents unique details which set it apart from historic models by adding a new flavour.

Its clarity, noble appearance and cool elegance predestine it for magazines and newspapers.

The Cardillac Family consists of 14 styles, provides many features which allow its application for ambitious typography.

It comes in OpenType format with extended language support. All weights contain small caps, ligatures, superior characters, proportional lining figures, tabular lining figures, proportional old style figures, lining old style figures, matching currency symbols, fraction- and scientific numerals, matching arrows and alternate characters.



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Download Green Fairy Fonts by Maria Montes

Download Green Fairy Fonts by Maria Montes
Download Green Fairy Fonts by Maria Montes Download Green Fairy Fonts by Maria Montes Download Green Fairy Fonts by Maria Montes



Green Fairy is a chromatic font family highly ornamented for display purposes. Green Fairys characters have been specifically designed to accommodate its loops and ornaments following a modern typeface structure.

Green Fairy has four chromatic weights: 1. Green Fairy Outline 2. Green Fairy Dots 3. Green Fairy Stencil 4. Green Fairy Full The outline weight has been created as the base or structure for the other weights.

You can combine these weights as well as add colours to obtain multiple effects and type styles.

More Green Fairy has also three combined weights (combos) to simplify your work flow, for these occasions when you only want to use one single colour in your font: 5.

Green Fairy Dots Combo 6. Green Fairy Stencil Combo 7. Green Fairy Full Combo GREEN FAIRY ORIGINS The origin of this typeface is the lettering I designed in October 2015 as part of my illustrated cocktail artwork called Absinthe.

La Fée Verte (The Green Fairy). Originally, this lettering only featured eight letters AB·SINTHE vector drawn in Illustrator. Right after creating the full-colour artwork, I designed a fountain-letterpress print version of it, in collaboration with Ladies of Letters, A.

K.A. Carla Hackett and Amy Constable from Saint Gertrude Fine Printing. At the beginning of 2016 and thanks to the project @36daysoftype I found the motivation, and most importantly the deadline, to draw the rest of the twenty-six letters of the uppercase alphabet using Illustrator.

I started 2017 having my first two calligraphy courses sold out, so I took this amazing opportunity to devote myself to Green Fairy for a few months.

In February 2017, I purchased the font software Glyphs and I started to re-draw all twenty-six letters of the uppercase alphabet again.

PRODUCTION PROCESS Green Fairy started being one weight, but quickly turned into a layered/chromatic font.

Things were going more or less fine till I arrived to the Dots weight: 1) I started drawing squares following a grid; 2) Then, the squares turned into diamonds following the same grid; 3) Then, the grid wasnt working so well on the round letters so I tried randomising the position of the diamonds but it didnt work; 4) So I went back to the grid, and this time scaled down the size of the diamonds creating a visual half-tone effect.

I spent over four weeks working on the Dots weight and I felt like I was in the middle of a very long tunnel and I couldnt see the light at the end.

I encountered many other problems along the way but by June 2017, I felt I was back on track again.

I kept working, tweaking, re-drawing and re-adjusting, and then the diacritics came on board And then more re-drawing, re-tweaking, re-adjusting and then numbers And then spacing, symbols, and currencies And then more spacing, kerning, contextual kerning for triplets In September 2017 I told myself thats it, Im going to finish it now! But guess what? More re-tweaking, testing, hinting, testing, rendering, testing For those of you not familiarized with typeface design, it is extremely time consuming and it requires a lot of hard work, focus and determination.

This project could not have been possible without the help of these generous professionals: Jose Manuel Urós, typeface designer based in Barcelona and my teacher twice in the past; Jamie Clarke, freelance letterer and typeface designer who has released a couple of chromatic fonts recently; Troy Leinster, Australian full-time typeface designer living and working in New York City; Noe Blanco, full-time typeface designer and hinting specialist based in Catalonia; And Nicole Phillips, typographer currently relocating from Australia to New Zealand.

To all of you: THANK YOU VERY MUCH!


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