Skip to content
Home / Fonts / FontFont / FF Basic Gothic
ABCDEabcde12345$€@&

FF Basic Gothic™

by FontFont
Individual Styles from $68.99 USD
Complete family of 16 fonts: $723.99 USD
FF Basic Gothic Font Family was designed by Hannes von Döhren, Livius Dietzel and published by FontFont. FF Basic Gothic contains 16 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

About FF Basic Gothic Font Family


German type designers Hannes von Döhren and Livius Dietzel created this sans FontFont in 2010. The family has 16 weights, ranging from Extra Light to Black (including italics) and is ideally suited for advertising and packaging, editorial and publishing, logo, branding and creative industries, small text as well as web and screen design. FF Basic Gothic provides advanced typographical support with features such as ligatures, small capitals, alternate characters, case-sensitive forms, fractions, and super- and subscript characters. It comes with a complete range of figure set options – oldstyle and lining figures, each in tabular and proportional widths.

Designers: Hannes von Döhren, Livius Dietzel

Publisher: FontFont

Foundry: FontFont

Design Owner: FontFont

MyFonts debut: Nov 29, 2011

FF Basic Gothic™ is a trademark of Monotype GmbH and may be registered in certain jurisdictions. FF is a trademark of Monotype GmbH registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office and may be registered in certain other jurisdictions.

About FontFont

Based in the trendy district of Kreuzberg in Berlin, Germany, FontFont was established in 1990 when FontShop founder Erik Spiekermann and fellow type designer Neville Brody wanted to build a foundry where type was made for designers, by designers; a place where type designers were given a fair and friendly offer and where true type magic was made. “From the very beginning,” representatives of the foundry say, “we wanted to bend the rules and test typographic boundaries, to build a library with a collection like no other; a range of typefaces that had different styles, different purposes, that was contemporary, experimental, unorthodox, and radical.”

Read more

Read less