Welcome to our monthly roundup of the best new fonts we’ve found online in the previous four weeks.
November’s edition is particularly strong for script-inspired sans, display faces with motion and energy, and a charming blackletter font. Enjoy!
Formiga is a versatile, humanist display typeface designed for attention-grabbing editorials. It has a clear, confident, and fun style, making it perfect for B2C branding projects. There are seven weights (from light to black) with a ton of OpenType features.
GeoScript is a lovely chunky brush script with three weights: Light, Medium, and Bold. It effortlessly combines handwritten and geometric elements making it perfect for a corporate logo with a bit more personality.
Anathera is a bold, minimalist typeface with a distinctive pixelation of its diagonal strokes. At large sizes the pixelated details feel disruptive, and at small sizes they create a sense of motion in the text. It’s a great choice for any project that needs to stand out.
Morph is a versatile display type system built from several different stencil and doubleline styles. It’s a clean modern family with enough variety to create visually interesting word shapes. It’s a great choice for logos, editorial, signage, and poster designs.
Brisca Miera is a graceful serif, with swashes and alternate characters to add variety and a sense of hand-crafted typography. It’s an excellent option any time you need a font for a sophisticated design.
Dorat is an extremely modern blackletter font. The style is vastly under-used — thanks to some unhappy associations — and this font provides the opportunity to lean into a visually strong style while remaining distinctly contemporary.
Mars is a carefully drawn humanist sans, offering a more interesting corporate face than fonts like Helvetica. It features four different weights: Condensed, Standard, SemiCondensed, and Extended; providing tremendous versatility. It’s a good choice for a company looking for an original voice in its communications.
Milling was designed after research into the shapes that lend themselves to CNC machining. There are three styles: Simplex, Duplex, and Triplex. It’s a practical font for anyone machining lettering, but it’s also an excellent font for conveying industrial production.
Wild Lines is a straight, urban graffiti font that captures the raw energy and edginess of street culture. Its clean, linear style adds structure while preserving graffiti’s rebellious feel. Ideal for projects needing an urban, bold aesthetic, it brings a fresh, city-inspired vibe to designs.
LiebeHeide Fineliner is a friendly script font with clean lines and smooth curves. Featuring plenty of ligatures and alternatives, it ensures natural, organic text flow and unique designs. It adds a personal touch to any project.
Arkbro is a variable typeface inspired by Ellen Arkbro’s track Mountain of Air, reflecting geometric principles and spatial harmony. Featuring extreme weight contrasts, it’s ideal for playful, animated displays. It’s an excellent choice for designs relating to music.
Hentak is a script font with a flowing, handwritten style and a vintage feel. Featuring dramatic curves and ornamental details, it combines modern and classic calligraphic qualities.
Formale Grotesque is a sans-serif typeface inspired by a 1930s alphabet board, blending geometric and dynamic forms with low stroke contrast. Its alternates shift from grotesque to humanist styles, adding versatility and depth.
Gonzaga is a vibrant modern slab serif with contemporary lines and playful rhythms. It has an energy that makes it perfect for logos, posters, and hero text on the web.
VFU (Visionary Font Ultra) is a humble sans with flared strokes that lean in the direction of serifs. It comes with nine weights with matching italics, and a display version.