Skip to content
Home / Fonts / Ingrimayne Type / Hexonu
ABCDEabcde12345$€@&

Hexonu

by Ingrimayne Type
Individual Styles from $6.95 USD
Complete family of 6 fonts: $14.95 USD
Hexonu Font Family was designed by Robert Schenk and published by Ingrimayne Type. Hexonu contains 6 styles and family package options.

More about this family
FREE 30-DAY TRIAL of Monotype Fonts to get over 150,000 fonts from more than 1,400 type foundries. Start free trial
Start free trial

HexonuUp

2 fonts

Per Style:

$4.97 USD

Pack of 2 styles:

$9.95 USD

HexonuDown

2 fonts

Per Style:

$4.97 USD

Pack of 2 styles:

$9.95 USD

Per Style:

$4.97 USD

Pack of 2 styles:

$9.95 USD

About Hexonu Font Family


Hexonu is a weird, awkward, monospaced font family. In place of true lower-case letters, it has a second set of capitals that, through the magic of the OpenType contextual alternatives (calt) feature, automatically alternates with the set on the upper-case keys. If one wants to use only one set of letters, the contextual alternatives must be turned off and character spacing adjusted.

Hexonu is another effort to create a font with alternating sets of letters (see PoultySign, Lentzers, and Caltic for others). The base shape for forming the letters is a lopsided hexagon that resembles an old coffin. In four of the six family members, the alternating shape is a distorted hour-glass. In the other two, coffin shapes heads-up alternate with coffin shapes heads-down. The family was created as an experiment with the calt feature and not for any particular use. It does not work as text but its bizarreness makes it appropriate for some poster and signage applications.

Designers: Robert Schenk

Publisher: Ingrimayne Type

Foundry: Ingrimayne Type

Design Owner: Ingrimayne Type

MyFonts debut: Apr 28, 2020

Hexonu

About Ingrimayne Type

IngrimayneType distributes digital typefaces designed by Robert Schenk. Robert became fascinated with type design in the late 1980s and began designing type in 1988 with an early version of Fontographer. He has designed a wide variety of typefaces, from standard text fonts to bizarre decorative faces. Many of these faces were designed to meet specific needs but others were experimental, designed as a challenge to form letters that met a narrowly-defined criteria. Areas of special strength in the IngrimayneType library include novelty fonts, picture fonts including tessellations, and fonts with alternating character sets.

Read more

Read less