Skip to main content

Download Mirantz Font Family From insigne

Download Mirantz Font Family From insigne
Download Mirantz Font Family From insigne Download Mirantz Font Family From insigne Download Mirantz Font Family From insigne



Y’all ready for this? Now starting for Insigne: the new serif Mirantz. This rookie all-star plays a precise game every game, cutting at all the right angles to leave your reader impressed and ready to see more. You can always count on Mirantz to lead with solid mechanics and a clean style, but don’t be surprised when the face keeps it real with a little individual flare and creativity. This personal touch is nothing short of elegance in every appearance. So what makes us love this rookie above the other great players in the field? Contrast, for one. Mirantz brings more contrast to the game than most serifs out there. The serifs on this face have a crisp, sharp wedge that naturally draws the reader’s eye. You can’t help but fall in love with its clean, natural style. Mirantz also features a tall x-height and regular proportions that can play a number of positions on the page and still stay strong through the last half of the copy or even the final period. Mirantz is a solid powerhouse player, containing a complete set of small capitals and nine weights from thin to bold. It can play well both down low and up top with its subscripts and superscripts and can move your reader’s eye easily across the copy with its titling capitals, condensed and extended variants, and open style figures. With its options covering more than 72 Latin-based languages, look for this newcomer to have international success in the near future. It you haven’t set your draft picks for this next round of projects, think hard before passing up Mirantz. A capable serif like this one is a guaranteed asset to any team of fonts. Production assistance from Lucas Azevedo.


Download Mirantz Font Family From insigne Download Now View Gallery


Popular posts from this blog

Download HKF Gold Queen DLC Font Family From Harry Kasyanov

Download HKF Gold Queen DLC Font Family From Harry Kasyanov Gold Queen is a vintage font family with features opentype with extension svg. Perfect for the vintage tattoo studio logos, barbershops, alcohol labels and many other. Includes a full set of character A-Z, numerals, and punctuation. Product content: HKF Gold Queen Regular - (OTF) HKF Gold Queen Drop line - (OTF) HKF Gold Queen Drop shadow (B&W) - (OTF) Color fonts (available only with Adobe illustrator CC 2018 and Photoshop CC from 2017) HKF Gold Queen Drop line (color) - (OTF SVG) HKF Gold Queen Drop shadow (color) - (OTF SVG) Download HKF Gold Queen DLC Font Family From Harry Kasyanov Download Now View Gallery

Download Cloudbuster Font Family From K-Type

Download Cloudbuster Font Family From K-Type Cloudbuster is K-Type’s take on the mid twentieth century style of extra condensed slabs/moderns inspired by Imre Reiner’s Corvinus Skyline of 1934. Unusually, Cloudbuster has a printed-look softness, courtesy of very slightly rounded corners throughout, so it looks a little less harsh than similar typefaces. The font is an imposing display face with elegant, unfussy letterforms and a generous x-height. Download Cloudbuster Font Family From K-Type Download Now View Gallery

Download Oddlini Font Family From sugargliderz

Download Oddlini Font Family From sugargliderz Inside my head, there are a number of forms of Sans Serif typefaces, and I cannot put aside any single one of them. Even if they were in the way of the reading process, I still think they form splendid letters. For me, when I hear for example "Sans Serif", then immediately Helvetica comes to my mind, even though I don't think that it is the best Sans Serif out there. Of course it is a great typeface, but I believe that one should not be fixated on the association of Sans Serif = Helvetica. It is just that Sans Serif goes hand in hand with Helvetica after all, and I don't think it is exaggerated to say that everyone throughout the world would agree. In my head there is no conflict about this either, and I readily agree with this thinking. However, just because of that I don't necessarily spend time studying Helvetica in detail and analyzing its subtleties in order to progress