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Fonts with commercial license
FontSquirrel has a nice selection of good fonts with commercial license.
FontSquirrel has a nice selection of good fonts with commercial license.
Check the free sans-serif font Vegur, I find the light weight very interesting. Check also the Medio typeface, a beautiful serifed font.
I feel in love today with this typeface. Capucine is being made by french designer Alice Savoie from FrenchType, who has a MA in typeface design from the University of Reading, UK. Capucine is the fruit of her MA. The importance of this typeface lies not only on its beautifulness, its legibility inherent to its humanist approach born once from handwriting, but on its completeness. It has extended latin (eng, eth, breve, caron, thorn, etc), and the greek alphabet. Of course, ligatures, small caps, text figures, everything and the kitchen sink. Capucine has five weights and one italic variant so far. Makr sure you download the specimen booklet with enough applications of Capucine to make you fall in love with her.
Alice Savoie also wrote a very interesting paper titled French Type Foundries in the Twentieth Century, available from Articles & Essays from TypeCulture.
As an aside, but interesting resource check the Wikipedia entry for the International Phonetic Alphabet.
This is Latinotype, a chilean digital type foundry, and has some awesome typefaces like Australis Regular, a beautiful serif typeface by Franciso Gálvez Pizarro, or (below) the gorgeous Patua Regular with sharp serifs by Luciano Vergara.
Latinotype has been founded by Miguel Hernández, being himself a designer, along with designers Luciano Vergara and Joaquín Contreras. They expect to add more typeface designers starting with their own country, Chile. The site is only in spanish for the moment. Prices for some of these fonts starts at USD 10.

When looking for a typeface we are presented with a huge amount of font options. The image above features the Romeral, Fertigo and Anivers typefaces (top down). Serifs, sans-serif, slab-serifs, humanists, expressionists, renacentists, rationalists, etc. The classification is huge and there are really high quality fonts out there. So how to choose one? which is one is better for our current work?
What kind of text are you composing? it could be an aside in the margins of a textbook, a full page text, an epigraph, a column of text for a blog, a financial column of numbers, etc. Each one has their pitfalls. For instance, if you’re composing a reading text, you’ll want to use the text figures for composing your numbers (also called oldstyle figures, or lowercase numbers), like the ones on the image above. These numbers work best when reading text since you don’t face with a BUMP of numbers on your pleasant text journey. Instead, text figures flow nicely with the text stream. However, if you’re designing a a financial report with columns of numbers you’ll want to use the lining figures with even widths since they will align vertically in a precise way.
Make sure it has all the weights you need. Medium (or regular), Bold, should be enough in most cases, but sometimes you may have to use a Semibold. Not too regular, not too heavy. Or a Light. Take a look at Museo at MyFonts (while you’re at it play around on the new MyFonts interface). It has enough weights for compositing any text. It doesn’t have variants though, and this is another issue that you must address. Does it has italics and small caps? You should always use small caps to compose acronyms like UN, USA, EU, uppercase characters are not the ones for this task. Tip: when you compose a headline using uppercase always add a bit of letter spacing, because most of the uppercase glyphs have kerning against lowercase letters, so if you compose uppercase without adding space, they would look a bit tight, since the spacing between characters is not enough.
Another feature are diacritics. Are you composing a french, portuguese or spanish text? make sure you’ve all the acute and grave accents, otherwise the text would look like… well, you know. What about ligatures? Ligatures usually replace consecutive characters that are too close to each other and if they were left like that, it would look messy. Standard ligatures help dealing with fi, fj, ft, like in “low-fi”, “fjord“, “drift”, where the hood of the f would overlap with the dot of the i. Depending on your text you’ll want to get fractions as well, where number-slash-number is replaced by a fractional representation.
Easy, you can’t write an english victorian novel like Dracula with a renacentist french typeface. Ok, this is an extreme case, but keep in mind that like architecture, industrial design and graphic design, each typeface is born in a specific history moment, with specific necesities and provides solution to specific problems. For instance, you can’t use Garamond for a teens magazine. And you may argue that Garamond is clearly legible, but the fact is that even so, Garamond belongs to another age, another kind of reading, another kind of content, and even belong to another paper and ink.
Erik Spiekermann says:
“Most good typefaces have been designed for one purpose, they do not come from a designer’s whim. Bodoni designed all his faces for specific books, Times was designed for the newspaper, Frutiger for signage at Charles de Gaulle airport, Helvetica to appeal to certain graphic designers, Bell Gothic for the American telephone books, Gill for a shopfront, Century for a magazine, Meta for the German post office.”
Sjoerd Hendrik de Roos y Jan van Krimpen agreed “that new technologies need new letterforms” and it’s absolutely true. Can you imagine spencerian calligraphy on your cellphone display?
Let’s take on the previous example about spencerian on your cellphone display: what about printing? Spiekerkmann created Meta for the German post office, and it would’ve worked great printing on low quality paper, just like Fedra or Officina. They’re rock solid when it comes to low budget corporative images. On the opposite side, we found John Baskerville and it’s Baskerville typeface. He even had to invent his own paper and ink to make them print perfectly. You can’t printing those nice serifs on porous paper where ink gets all the paper wet. Make sure the typeface suits the printing medium.
Nowadays all fonts are made on screen so they usually look good on screen. Small sizes is a different story. Bad typefaces, those really cruel, don’t have hinting that allows them to display properly at small sizes. They look blurred, they hurt your eyes. Don’t use them for those small sizes.
On the other hand, be careful not to use fonts that are not intended to be used in small sizes. Fedra Sans Display can’t be used at a tiny size, it must be used at a large size, that’s why it’s a Display font. In this case for example, you should use Fedra Sans for composing small text.
Dutch Type, by Jan Middendorp. Complete view on Google Books.
The elements of typographic style (page on Wikipedia). Buy it and read it, it’s awesome.
Check the Lavoisier font, distributed under the SIL Open Font License. It looks really good and it’s absolutely free.
Daxion now has a larger character set, better horizontal metrics, it’s no longer available for free download and you can buy it on GraphicRiver. As a bonus, you get the psd used for the preview images used in GraphicRiver.
Daxion is a typeface made of dots that look better at large sizes and will shine when used in disco flyers or posters with retro or futuristic styles. At the same time, if you need a pixel font at 8px, it will also look good and you can see it in the corresponding additional preview image. The Daxion font contains an extensive character set with tilde, accents and main money signs. Check the additional screenshots on GraphicRiver for the full character set covered.
Check also the Tessa typeface.