Logbook + Scratchpad

fonts

While I was looking for a cool font to use, I have come across Datalegreya. I really like its original look, and the idea of using ligatures and contextual alternates to add another layer to characters is really intriguing.

Datalegreya is based on Alegreya Sans SC, a beautiful sans-serif small caps font. The interesting twist is the use of character combinations such as d|2a|1t|3a|2 to overlay a line chart (or a variation of one) onto standard characters. You can try this on Font Library itself.

The basic format is as follows:

  • Type the character you want to style, for example d.
  • Add a combination of | (pipe) and a number between 0 and 3 to determine the height of the line after it crosses the character (by default it starts with 0 before the first character).
  • Continue until the end of the text.

There are other features including the x-axis and y-axis legend, a min/max value indicator, and neutral spaces, all described in the README file included with the fonts.

If you plan to use this font as a Web font, be careful as the OTF files are quite large; anyway, when converted to the WOFF2 format, their size reduces significantly. I am not sure this is a good use of the font, anyway, since the text itself is hardly readable if the font is not correctly loaded for any reason; nevertheless, I find it undoubtedly cool.

#TIL #fonts #design

I am a fan of open-source software since forever. Lately, while looking at fonts for a website, I've again come across open-source fonts. The main reason I like them is that open licenses leave no doubt about where and how you can use a font: personal projects, commercial projects, desktop applications, websites, and so on – which are instead usually limited with commercial licenses.

Do open-source fonts have to look unprofessional? Not at all. The League of Moveable Type has a great manifesto that explains why open-sourcing fonts is a good idea, and they offer some very good-looking fonts too; in fact, I still use the very popular Raleway, and for a while I've been quite in love with the less popular, futuristic-looking Orbitron.

There are many resources where to find, try, and download open-source fonts:

#OSS #fonts #design