Skip to main content

Download Vertical Font Family From Alias

Download Vertical Font Family From Alias


Alias Vertical is a sans serif typeface with a vertical cut-off point for letter endings. The vertical cut-offs bend round characters (b, c, o, etc) into a squarish, high-shouldered shape, suggesting Roger Excoffon’s Antique Olive. In mid-weights, the typeface mixes Antique Olive with typefaces such as Gill or Johnston, for example the shape of the t, the l borrowing Johnston’s flick. Vertical has the same minimal difference in weight between verticals and horizontals as Gill and Johnston, and the same sharp connection point where curves meet straight lines. Like Antique Olive, Vertical has a narrow connection point here, adding contrast and definition. The overall effect feels austere at lighter weights and strident and graphic at bolder weights, and sharp and incised throughout. In the Bold and Black weights, the squarish and top heavy shape of Antique Olive is most noticeable. For example the wide uppercase, with the B having almost-even width between top and bottom curves, and the almost-overhang of the top curve of the G. But Vertical does not have as extreme an aesthetic or square shape as Antique Olive. As well as its wide design, the upper case is given extra authority by being a slightly heavier weight than the lower case. This is a device borrowed from Gill, and other ‘old’ typefaces, where the upper case is presented as a titling design. Modern sensibilities are more focussed on an even colour between upper and lower case. Vertical was originally intended as a sister typeface to Ano, like AnoAngular or AnoStencil. Vertical developed into a similar but separate design. Ano was designed for use in Another Man — in its modular, circle-base design, and the way there aren’t the amendments usually made in bolder weights to ensure letter clarity. This is for layouts where different weights are used together in different sizes so that the overall letter weight is the same, a feature of the magazine. Where Ano is simple and graphic, Vertical has nuance and texture. It is a pragmatic, utility design. In the balance between graphic and typographic, its focus is the latter.


Download Vertical Font Family From Alias


Popular posts from this blog

Download FS Split Sans Font Family From Fontsmith

Download Now Server 1 Download Now Server 3 Download Now Server 2 FS Split is a contrasting typeface. An in-vogue but unpolished, distinctive and eclectic design. The fresh, modern sans and serif type families can bring so much variety to everything from magazines and packaging, to websites and branding. The conflicting yet harmonising nature of sans and serif give designers the tools they need to be both bold and subtle, eclectic and ordinary, contemporary and classic.  Download FS Split Sans Font Family From Fontsmith

Download Chuck Noon Script Font Family From Fontdation

Download Now Server 1 Download Now Server 3 Download Now Server 2 After long time no script, finally we released our new Chuck Noon Script. A clean and bold script fonts that offers you a natural hand-lettering experience. Handcrafted and digitally checked with high attention to the details, we're a sucker for clean lines and crispy edges too, just like you. Available in two styles; Script and Brush, their dynamic letterforms work like magic, whether you go all caps or using it normally as a script. Suits best for logotype, poster/t-shirt designs, food/beverage labels, hipster quotes, greeting cards, wedding invitations, and many more. Download Chuck Noon Script Font Family From Fontdation

Download FS Kim Font Family From Fontsmith

Download Now Server 1 Download Now Server 3 Download Now Server 2 FS Kim is bold and intriguing—exuberant and unmissable, but playing a supporting role when needed. FS Kim shines brightest as a display font, and is perfect for applications across fashion, theatre, cultural projects and pretty much any brand that wants to make a statement. While this font is dramatic, it’s incredibly versatile, too, and works to showcase content in a stylish, striking way. In an unusual twist, the display version was created first using a broad-nib pen to create familiar forms and elegance while still breaking from serif traditions and making it all about standout character. While FS Kim’s text version is more constrained than the display, the strength and playfulness remain and text and display maintain a strong connection that mean they can be used together. This ...