Fortezza is a family of fonts inspired by the great masters who have created the Modern Roman style: Firmin Didot (1764 -1836) and Giambattista Bodoni (1740 -1813)
Both typefaces can be similar, but a trained and close vision, show clear differences in the final result, like its weight and the degree of transition of the strokes. The type of Didot suggests greater warmth and elegance, they are characterized by extreme contrast in thick strokes and thin strokes, by the use of serifs very thin and by the vertical stress of the letters. while the Bodoni type conveys a greater robustness and hardness.
Fortezza brings together the elegance and spirit of both types, but proposes a contemporary vision, establishing a distance with certain features typical of the baroque that was manifested at that time.
Download Fortezza Font Family From Eurotypo
Download Jaymont Font Family From Mans Greback
aymont is a sharp typeface family drawn and created by Måns Grebäck during 2018.
It is brave and experimental, yet confident.
The family consists of ten high-quality fonts, five different weights and each weight as italic.
The weights are Jaymont Thin, Jaymont Light, Jaymont Medium, Jaymont Bold and Jaymont Black, each with an equally strong character.
The fonts support all European Latin-based languages, and contain ligatures and a wide range of useful symbols.
Download Hefring Slab™ Font Family From The Northern Block Ltd
Hefring Slab is a geometric Slab Serif type family. Based on simple geometry, it has minimal stroke contrast, solid serif presence and a uniform thickness of strokes. The family consists of 20 fonts: 5 weights in 4 widths, each in Roman and Italic. Inspired by the work of the renowned Margaret Vivienne Calvert, Hefring Slab is robust, clear and functional. Opentype features include alternative characters, arrows, tabular figures, ligatures and fractions.
Download JH Lina Font Family From JH Fonts
Download JH Roy Font Family From JH Fonts
Download JH Farid Font Family From JH Fonts
Download Malden Sans Font Family From Monotype
Malden Sans is a mischievous grotesque sans serif with charming details that gives designers a solid typographic voice. It was created by Michele Patanè with regular and condensed widths, as a utilitarian typeface family for print and digital environments.
It was originally designed as part of a type system for cinema magazines, and embodies the devil-may care attitude of the silver screen. Designer Michele Patanè looked back to an earlier era of typography to create the typeface, embracing unusual details, rather than ironing them out.
“There is a very naive way of using typography in the 30s and 40s, something not as clean as how it’s used in the late 50s and 60s when everything passed through a rationalisation of the typographic palette,” he explains. “In film magazines you can still see a bit of roughness, and I like that.”
This is a design that’s desperate to be used in editorial environments, and has been created to stand up to lower quality paper. It would be equally at home on posters, packaging, and even in digital environments where designers are looking for something more expressive than another geometric sans serif.
Malden Sans includes a Normal and Condensed range, with 7 weights in the normal and 6 in the Condensed, both including italics.