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Correspondence Fonts

Give your message the right tone of voice with this selection of fonts for all your correspondence needs.

Noah Nazir
C
Last edited October 03, 2017

We can hope the days of seeing messages—on paper or on screen—in Courier, Times or Arial are long past. We all have different voices, so there is no reason why all our communication should look the same. These correspondence fonts make sure your message comes across as professional and personable, with the right tone of voice – monospaced looking yet proportional typefaces that appear more typographic than true typewriter faces, from business-like to friendly.

brandy
microphysics
Throw mischievous cook the sauce

The Handel Gothic™ typeface has been a mainstay of graphic communication for over 40 years - all the while looking as current as tomorrow. Designed by Don Handel in the mid-1960s, and used in the 1973 United Airlines logo developed by Saul Bass, Handel Gothic was an instant success when released to the graphic design community. Its generous lowercase x-height, full-bodied counters and square... Read More

jungle
bureaucratic
Simulated meat floss biscuits

FF OCR-F came as the first in a series of “non-design” typefaces for the FontFont library. Technically oriented faces, such as DIN, Courier, Pica, or OCR-A and OCR-B have never seen so much demand in design as today. Art directors, magazine publishers, and poster designers love their cold, martial forms. At the same time, many would like to have a few more weight options and perhaps a... Read More

always
zygapophysis
Miscellaneous bacteria pot monsters

FF Suhmo draws inspiration from classic slab serif types, particularly those used as and derived from typewriter faces, like Courier and American Typewriter. Designer Alex Rütten took influence from these and several other sources when creating FF Suhmo, like the neon-lettering typical of old Italian restaurants across Germany for instance. The design has short ascenders and descenders, a large... Read More

mystic
wunderkinder
The world without his nucleus

Sumner Stone worked together with Bob Ishi of Adobe to create the Stone family fonts, which appeared in 1987. Coincidentally, ishi is the Japanese word for stone, which precluded any squabbling about whose name the font would carry. The family consists of three types of fonts, a serif, a sans-serif and an informal style. The Stone fonts are very legible and make a modern, dynamic impression.

mystic
fiddlesticks
No tails in the disorder please

Seeing the possibility of creating a Meta for everyday office use (instead of a specialized tool for graphic designers), Erik Spiekermann expanded the family with this function in mind. The oldstyle figures were replaced with default tabular lining ones and the overall spacing was loosened for better reproduction on a wider variety of screens, printers, copiers, and fax machines. In 2012... Read More

safety
wunderkinder
The best things in life are furry

FF Nuvo is a contemporary sans with a slight contrast. Certain characters have a calligraphic touch, especially a, g and y. The typeface offers several alternate characters that may be substituted – for example: a, g, k, s, y – for additional typographic range in text. Designer Siegfried Rückel developed the concept for FF Nuvo during a stay in Paris, after being inspired by the extravagant... Read More

always
enthusiastic
Go ahead, make my day

FF Info is named after its purpose: the transfer of information. Its clean lines make no fashion statements, nor do they attempt any technical wizardry. The typeface was initially intended for use on traffic signage,and other wayfinding systems in stations, on buildings, etc. Because space comes at a premium in such situations, FF Info Display is drawn narrow; It requires 15% less space than... Read More

rocket
fiddlesticks
Fat people are harder to kidnap

FF Fago goes professional with its two Correspondence members, Sans and Serif, made with the needs of the business world in mind. The proportions and robust, screen-friendly letterforms are adjusted for clear communication. To meet the standards and limitations of the office environment, tabular figures and an open italic ‘a’ are standard, and ligatures were removed.

brandy
conceptional
Survivors will be shot again

FF Fago goes professional with its two Correspondence members, Sans and Serif, made with the needs of the business world in mind. The proportions and robust, screen-friendly letterforms are adjusted for clear communication. To meet the standards and limitations of the office environment, tabular figures and an open italic ‘a’ are standard, and ligatures were removed.

replay
enthusiastic
Smile, It confuses people

The premise for FF Ernestine came from the search for a versatile monolinear text face whose design could transmit seemingly opposite feelings. Its designer, Nina Stössinger, hoped to develop a solution that would feel inviting, but also serious; somewhat feminine, but not too swirly-girly – at once both charming and sturdy. The design’s rather large x-height and wide, open shapes allow it to... Read More

vortex
guitarfishes
Fly chair shaking his head

FF Zwo started as a constructivist concept, which was abandoned over time in favor of something more functional. Its final resulting forms create a legible and clear face, rigid and sturdy, but with a decidedly contemporary handling. The design spreads out over eight weights, each with italics and small caps. Single-story “a” and “g” alternates are included, as well as stemless “u.” A... Read More

grapes
guitarfishes
What is the sound of shit happening?

Because of its linear nature and relative loose fit, FF Alega may be used in a variety of circumstances, producing headlines or even for setting text. When Rückel designed FF Alega, he did not consider adding a serif version. But following the typeface’s release, he experimented with the idea and decided that the effort was worthwhile. FF Alega Serif has a technical look, but is very readable.... Read More

vortex
zygapophysis
Danger! Dinosaur area, keep out

FF Signa is a characteristically Danish design, rooted in architectural lettering rather than book typography. Originally created for signage—hence the name—FF Signa is now a typographic family with three widths. All weights include italics, small caps, and several styles of figures. Because of the quality of this “vernacular-lettering-turned-typeface” conversion, FF Signa received a Danish... Read More

winter
conceptional
Please do not sit on crocodile

FF Typestar, from Steffen Sauerteig, part of the eBoy design collective, is one of the most sophisticated typewriter-inspired fonts in the FontFont library. Although FF Typestar is essentially a geometric typeface, it is still subtly refined. The small system includes two families. The first is a typical font quartet: regular, italic, black, and black italic. These offer everything needed for... Read More

replay
zygapophysis
No tails in the disorder please

FF Letter Gothic is a family designed by Albert Pinggera based on the old IBM “Letter Gothic” typewriter faces. As the name suggests, this version is not monospaced, but is proportionally-spaced for setting text. A monospaced version is available; see FF Letter Gothic Mono. Each of FF Letter Gothic Text’s three weights is accompanied by a true italic companion. As is the case with many families... Read More

Donald Handel, Nadine Chahine and Rod McDonald
ITC 2010
Albert-Jan Pool
FontFont 1995
Alex Rütten
FontFont 2010
Sumner Stone
ITC 1988
Erik Spiekermann and Ole Schäfer
FontFont 1997
Ermin Mededovic
TypeTogether 2014
Siegfried Rückel
FontFont 2008

ParaType

ParaType
Erik Spiekermann and Ole Schäfer
FontFont 1998
Ole Schäfer and Andreas Eigendorf
FontFont 2000
Ole Schäfer and Andreas Eigendorf
FontFont 2000
Veronika Burian
TypeTogether
Hrant Papazian and Nina Stössinger
FontFont 2011
Luc(as) de Groot
LucasFonts 2022
Henning Krause and Jörg Hemker
FontFont 2002
Siegfried Rückel
FontFont 2002
Ole Berntsen Søndergaard
FontFont 2000
Tim Ahrens
Just Another Foundry
Steffen Sauerteig
FontFont 1998
Albert Pinggera
FontFont 1996