Designed by Henning Skibbe, NewsSans is a sans serif font family. This typeface has ninety styles and was published by Character Type. Download Now Server 1 Download Now Server 3 Download Now Server 2 NewsSans is a multi-tool typeface system incorporating no fewer than 90 styles. It was designed to allow a maximum range of visual shades when creating a typographic look, effortlessly ranging from loud and expressive, to subtle and reserved. The large x-height combined with low ascenders and descenders allows for tight and efficient designs. All sharp corners were trimmed off to add character and a nuance of extra space. NewsSans’ strokes link humanist curves with ‘American Grotesque’ details and solid square stems. The system contains nine weights from hairline to black, and five widths from compressed to extended, each accompanied by a proper italic. NewsSans i...
Designed by Moritz Kleinsorge , Glance Slab is a display slab and stencil font family. This typeface has seven styles and was published by Moritz Kleinsorge . Download Now Server 1 Download Now Server 3 Download Now Server 2 Many good things such as X-rays, penicillin and water ice were discovered accidentally. And now Glance Slab completes the list. To complete his type library, type designer Moritz Kleinsorge designed a new Slab Serif, but he was not happy with his first design at all. So he started experimenting with certain shapes and by accident the shoulder of the lowercase letter /n was suddenly no longer connected to the stem anymore. He liked this accidental discovery so much that he took this feature and created a complete typeface out of it - without receiving a stencil typeface, because he sees the unconnected elements more as an ink trap than as a s...
Designed by Keith Bates, Oxford Street is a sans serif font published by K-Type . Download Now Server 1 Download Now Server 3 Download Now Server 2 Oxford Street is a signage font that began as a redrawing of the capital letters used for street nameplates in the borough of Westminster in Central London. The nameplates were designed in 1967 by the Design Research Unit using custom lettering based on Adrian Frutiger’s Univers typeface, a curious combination of Univers 69 Bold Ultra Condensed, a weight that doesn’t seem to exist but which would flatten the long curves of glyphs such as O, C and D, and Universe 67 Bold Condensed with its more rounded lobes on glyphs like B, P and R. Letters were then remodelled to improve their use on street signs. Thin strokes like the inner diagonals of M and N were thickened to create a more monolinear alphabet; the high interior apexes were lowered and the wide joins thinned. The crossbar of the A was lowered, the K was made ...