MetroBots is a fun loving, non-traditional but very functional family of 6 fonts made from big city skies, the long tropical morning shadows of ancient ziggurats and whole pueblo apartment blocks, nestled into the...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
Monstro is a carefully hand-crafted typeface with different lettershapes on upper- and lowercase slots, although being an all-caps font. When working in OpenType savvy applications, the contextual alternates feature can take care of alternating...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified May 18, 2024
Display Crisp is a display font not intended for text use. It was designed specifically for display, headline, logotype, branding, and similar applications. Display Crisp has tall and short cap alphabets, numbers, and punctuation.
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
OHG is pleased to announce the release of Tynne 2.0, now with two new out-line, drop-shade fonts which work independently as attractive display faces in their own right or one layer of a two...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 27, 2022
Maga shares the skeleton with one of our first typefaces (Quaestor, from 2004), but we didn’t want to simply expand an existent design, so we took a step forward—not just with improved features and...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 27, 2022
Acto is a type system designed as the sans serif counterpart of the previous released Acta. Both type families were designed in 2010 for the redesign of the Chilean newspaper La Tercera, but unlike...
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
I proudly present Savant, a friendly headline typeface with an attitude. It’s got a slab serif touch and is packed with lots of nice typo-gems. The italic is a perfect companion for the regular....
by Staff · Published May 26, 2015
· Last modified December 28, 2022
This family was inspired from the set of fontfaces used by Francisco Del Hierro, to print in 1726 the first Spanish language Dictionary from the Spanish Royal Academy (Real Academia Española, Diccionario de Autoridades)....