Aromatron is a display typeface with a balanced and consistent rhythm. Drawing inspiration from the shapes of nature, unique solutions were employed to achieve a rich, dark, creamy texture. Warm, soft and friendly, but as a black stencil, also quite striking.
The font is packed with OpenType features: four sets of numerals; automatic fractions; not only small and petite caps, but also a third, larger set, nicknamed medium caps; superscript and subscript; contextual swash caps. Petite cap glyphs compose well with regular lowercase and are employed by stylistic sets for a unicase effect or compact typesetting.
Aromatron offers support for most Latin-based languages, including Vietnamese and major Latin-based languages of Africa (Fula, Ewe, Akan, Igbo, to name a few). The International Phonetic Alphabet is accommodated as well. A selection of symbols and ornaments completes the vast character set.
Showing posts with label african. Show all posts
Showing posts with label african. Show all posts
Friday, January 3, 2020
Tuesday, December 31, 2019
Download Ares Fonts Family From Adam Jagosz
By Fujiati December 31, 2019
african, european, film credits, film poster, futuristic, language support
Ares is a crisp all-caps display typeface, suitable for sci-fi logos and titles. Its angular, top-heavy letters hang from the cap-height rather than simply sit on the baseline, giving off a futuristic, steampunk vibe.
The typeface consists of six subfamilies available in 10 weights, as well as as two variable fonts of three axes: weight, tracking, and custom mid-height axis.
The mid-height axis affects the typeface's waistline, including crossbars, and divides the fonts into three subfamilies: Ares Lo, Ares, and Ares Hi. These three families are solid-stroked, and the other three families are their stencil-stylized counterparts: Ares Broken Hi, Ares Broken, and Ares Broken Lo.
The tracking axis is only available in the variable versions, and proportionally affects the kerning, thus helping set the type more tightly without effort.
Ares supports a wide range of Latin-based orthographies, including not only European, but also Vietnamese as well as major African languages like Hausa, Fula or Ewe.