Morison is an original but versatile serif family. With just about the right amount of personality and character, it can stand out when needed, but works equally well in everyday tasks where legibility is the key.
The Morison family consists of separate stylistic ranges for display and text use. Each range comes in eight weights with corresponding italics.
The display versions are sophisticated enough for tasks where a certain amount of extra elegance and flair are required, without compromising much on legibility. The text versions, however, are true workhorses, suitable for continuous texts in small sizes.
All Morison fonts are equipped with handy Open Type features, such as built-in small capitals and multiple numeral styles.
Showing posts with label got it. Show all posts
Showing posts with label got it. Show all posts
Download Morison Font Family From Fenotype
Download Jollin Font Family From Creativemedialab
Jollin - A Pretty Bold, attractive and simple Display font!
Available in regular and italic version, Jollin has tons of alternates that you can use to create a simple but pretty letters. Jollin is perfect for heading, logo creation, advertisements, labels, business card, branding and more!
To access alternate:
In Adobe Photoshop go to Window - glyphs
In Adobe Illustrator go to Type - glyphs
Download Westfield Nouveau JNL Font Family From Jeff Levine
The hand lettered song title on the sheet music for 1918’s ‘N’ Everything (from the Al Jolson show “Sinbad”) was the inspiration and model for Westfield Nouveau JNL, which is available in both regular and oblique versions.
Download Nurnberg Font Family From Vintage Voyage Design Supply
Nürnberg (Nuremberg in eng.)
New blackletter-sans font family in modern look with contrasts elements in six widths. Impressive style with non-typical Blackletter uppercases as alternates and normal Sans as standard. In the company with good-looking lowercases and their alternates you can get outstanding result for your project.
Six widths give you wide range of use. Massive Bold or Black will be really good in none-long magazine headlines, some logos or cafe/bar signs, menu's or coffeeshops. Medium or Regular is for normally (not giant) text blocks or any of accented texts. Light and Thin are good in big pt. Short word forms or numerals is just awesome.
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