New High-Quality Free Fonts
Every now and then, we look around, select fresh free high-quality fonts and present them to you in a brief overview. The choice is enormous, so the time you need to find them is usually time you should be investing in your projects. We search for them and find them so that you don’t have to.
In this selection, we’re pleased to present Homestead, Bree Serif, Levanderia, Valencia, Nomed Font, Carton and other quality fonts. Please note that while most fonts are available for commercial projects, some are for personal use only and are clearly marked as such in their descriptions. Also, please read the licensing agreements carefully before using the fonts; they may change from time to time.
Free Fonts
Homestead
Homestead is a very distinctive Slab Serif typeface that leaves a lasting impression with its geometric forms and a modern, progressive look. The family is available in 6 weights: Regular, Inline Display, One, Two and Three. Released by the Lost Type foundry with the “name-your-price” pricing scheme. Homestead can be used freely for any personal or commercial use.
Bree Serif Regular
This typeface is the serif cousin of the playful, charming and versatile type family Bree which was designed by Veronika Burian and José Scaglione back in 2008. Actually, Bree is also the typeface used in the Smashing Cartoons. An italic font weight of Bree Serif should be available very soon. Released under the liberal OFL license (via Typografie.info).
Lavanderia
Lavanderia is a script font based on lettering found on Laundromat windows of San Francisco’s Mission District. It features numerous OpenType features such as swashes, titling alternates, figures, stylistic alternates, ligatures. It is available in three weights, with Uppercase, Lowercase, Numerals and Punctuation sets. Designed by the talented type designer James T. Edmondson and released by the Lost Type Co-Op foundry. Free for personal and commercial use.
RBNo2
This new gothic sans serif font was inspired by the late 19th century industrial fonts that contained german roots regarding straightness and geometry. Combined with other sans serifs, slab serifs and serif fonts, it catches the eye when used in headlines and short copy texts. Alternate versions turn the font into a perfect partner for modern, technical and contemporary impressions as well as high-quality, luxury and timeless environments. Free to use in commercial and non-commercial projects. Designed by Rene Bieder.
Cassannet
Cassannet is a geometrical art deco typeface available in Regular, Bold and Outline weights, based on lettering seen on Cassandre posters. This typeface contains ligatures, capitals, numbers, small capitals and also titling alternates. You can pay a random amount of money or alternatively send out a tweet or a Facebook post to download the fonts for free.
Valencia
Valencia is a condensed, art-deco inspired typeface that includes five weights, ranging from hairline to black, with matching obliques for each weight. The typeface has a nice corporate vintage look which makes it a great fit for large headlines and prints as well as any collateral or stationery. Valencia’s distinctive appearance stems from its low horizontal crossbars and its full-circle curves. Released by the Lost-Type Co-Op foundry with the “name-your-price” pricing scheme and hence freely available for personal and commercial use.
Jura
Jura is an elegant serif typeface with narrow proportions and distinguishing details. The rounded, wedge-shaped serifs offer a contemporary feel and also achieve to maintain legibility even with its range of small sizes. This typeface is available in four weights: Regular, Italic, Bold and Bold Italic and is available for free download and use.
Nomed Font
Nomed Font is a free typeface that can help you achieve a modern and sophisticated look in your designs. The triangular geometric shapes may be a bit hard to read but that’s exactly the highlight of this particular style, and it makes the typography unique and original.
Carton
This typeface, designed by Nick McCosker, is a strong yet sensitive slab-serif inspired by letterpress. Its sturdy appearance makes it a perfect fit for posters, headings and taglines, in both classic and contemporary contexts. Released by the Lost Type Co-Op under the “name-your-price” pricing scheme.
Novecento (Registration on MyFonts is required!)
This typeface is an uppercase-only font family with some pretty impressive geometric forms that have been inspired by historical European typographic tendencies. It was designed to be used mostly for headlines, visual identities or short sentences — both in big and small sizes. The family contains 471 glyphs and 32 font weights whereas six of the font weights of the wide-version (Light, Book, Normal, Medium, Demibold and Bold) are available for free download and use.
Fjord
Fjord is serif typeface that has specifically been designed for book publications. It is intended to be used in long texts and in relatively small print size. Fjord features sturdy construction, prominent serifs, low-contrast modulation and long elegant ascenders as well as descenders relative to the ‘x’ height. Fjord performs well in sizes starting from 12px and higher; nevertheless, it can also be a distinctive font choice for larger text headlines and in corporate design. This serif typeface include Cyrillic and Greek characters and is available at Google Web Fonts. It has been released under the SIL Open Font License, 1.1. Feel free to take a look at the designer’s free font Armata as well.
Hero
Hero is a crisp geometrical typeface applicable for any type of use: print, Web, logos, posters, booklets. This typeface contains 162 characters and is free for personal and commercial use. Available in the OpenType format for PC and Mac.
Otama e.p.
Here’s a quite confident typeface to use for expensive and fashionable designs. Strong steams and thin serifs shows similarities to the well-known traditional Didot typeface. This typeface is free for personal and commercial use.
Ribbon
This typeface is a geometric display face which includes OpenType features for an alternate alphabet. The family contains sets for Uppercase, Numerals and Punctuation. Released by the Lost Type Co-Op under the “name-your-price” pricing scheme and designed by Dan Gneiding. If you decide to buy the font for $30 or more, you will get a beautiful Ribbon Specimen Book as well.
Movavi
Movavi is a sans serif font that is available only in the font weights Black and Black Italic. Obviously, the typeface wouldn’t work for body copy, but it might work nicely in short headings or “groovy” art works. Available for free download and use on PC and Mac.
Satellite
Satellite is a geometric sans serif font designed by Matt Yow. The typeface can be a great fit for short headlines, short body copy or slogans. Released under the SIL Open Font License.
Open Sans
Open Sans is a very clean font family by Ascender Fonts. It includes ten styles (Light, Regular, Italic, Semibold, Bold, Bold Italic, Extrabold) and each one consists of more than 900 glyphs: Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, many of the regular diacrytic letters as well as “hanging” numbers. Also available at Google Web Fonts and released under the Apache License version 2.
Mosaic Leaf
The glyphs of this expressive typeface are built out of leaves of different sizes. Mosaic Leaf also contains numbers, punctuation and currency symbols. The .zip-package contains PDF, OTF and TTF files; the fonts support Western and Central European encoding, and also Baltic, Nordic and Turkish. The typeface is free to use in commercial and non-commercial projects. Designed and prepared by Lukasz Kulakowski and Zbyszek Czapnik.
Amaranth
Amaranth is a sans serif font family of four basic styles (regular, italic, bold, bold italic) with individually shaped letter forms that makes typeface more playful. Suitable for both Web and print, longer texts and headings. Available at Google Web Fonts and licensed under the SIT OpenType License. Image credit and source: dersven.
Siruca Pictograms
A pictogram open source font made as a part of Siruca signage system designed by Fabrizio Schiavi. The font contains many picograms related to sport, signage, home, social meetings, free time activities and business.
Erler Dingbats
For the first time in the entire history of Unicode standard, the full encoding range for dingbats is now covered by a complete, contemporary quality font. FF Dingbats 2.0 features more than 800 glyphs and is mainly a tool for professional designers and has been created for everyday communication purposes. It includes a wide range of popular symbols and pictograms such as arrows, pens, phones, stars, crosses and checkmarks, plus three sets of cameo figures on round backgrounds. Free of charge. (via fontblog)
Further Free Fonts
SD Sansimillia
SD Sansimillia is a playful, yet elegant typeface suitable for many different applications. Originally cut for a local advertising brand, SD Sansimillia is inspired by the Antenna Family built by Cyrus Highsmith in 2007 as well as Erik Spiekermann’s FF Din Family cut in 1994. It is issued in regular, bold and black weights.
Mimic Roman
Mimic Roman is a modern sans serif face with evenly balanced strokes and a counter on a slight angle, giving it a 1950s retro look.
Roboto
Roboto Family is a linear sans serif font, available in 8 different styles of which each includes more than 900 glyphs — Greek and Cyrillic, too. This font was designed by Google for Andorid and is licensed under the Google Android License.
Mate
An elegant serif font designed by Eduardo Tunni. This typeface was primarily designed to be used in longer body copies in printed material. It is simple in structure and has sharp as well as generous counter-shapes which create a medium texture that calls for page color. It can also be used as display typography and is available at Google Web Fonts.
Last Click
Shape Type
If you are passionate about typography and have fun experimenting with glyphs, then you will certainly like the rather unusual type-design game created by the interaction designer Mark MacKay. The idea of this JavaScript-based letter-shaping game is simple: you get 10 modified letters from various classic typefaces, and you have to try to make them right by dragging curves along their axes. It’s an engaging way to explore what makes or breaks a glyph.
Font-Bot Project
It is time for your favorite font to stand its ground. The idea is to build robots out of a type face, showcase them and hope others put together a potential opponent. Once there are two font-bots ready to compete against each other, only thing left would be to “let the battle begin!” Participating is not hard, the rules are clear: all robots must be built of type alone (letters A to Z). Let’s see if your font has what it takes to defend its corner. Fight!
Further Resources
- Lost Type Co-Op
The Lost Type Co-Op is a Pay-What-You-Want Type foundry. Users have the opportunity to pay whatever they like for a font; you can type in ‘$0′ for a free download. 100% of all funds from these sales go directly to the designers of the fonts themselves, respectively. - The League of Moveable Type
The open-source type movement for bringing high-quality tyepfaces to the Web. The creators of the project keep releasing quality fonts every now and then so be sure to stay tuned! - Google Web Fonts
A growing directory of hundreds of free, open-source fonts optimized for the Web. Google also provides ready-to-use snippets for integrating the fonts to your website. - Typography and Free Fonts on Smashing Magazine
An overview of typography-related articles and free font round-ups on Smashing Magazine.
We sincerely appreciate the time and effort of all type designers featured in this post. Please keep in mind that type design is a time-consuming craft which truly deserves reward and support. Please consider supporting type designers who create and release amazing typefaces for all of us to use.
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Niels van Tilborg
January 9th, 2012 5:51 pmWow, really nice fonts. And that for free, thank you!
Ivo
January 9th, 2012 6:01 pmA lot of very interesting fonts, thanks for sharing this!
Yorik Wnent
January 9th, 2012 6:53 pmAwesome, thank’s a lot, i’ll go share that :)
deborah
January 9th, 2012 8:03 pmAnother excellent and very versatile, usable collection… thank you, Smashing !!
Julianne Bueno
January 9th, 2012 8:34 pmGreat collection, I’m really liking Homestead & Lavanderia!
Weronika
January 9th, 2012 8:52 pmI love you Smashing. This is brilliant!
RichardL
January 10th, 2012 2:45 amGreat review thanks – nice to see a review with a lot of great new fonts, rather than relistings of ones we’ve seen before.
Vrenna
January 10th, 2012 4:34 amPhotoshop (CS4, 64 bit) on Windows (7, 64 bit) doesn’t seem to understand the different styles of Homestead. Only the style “One” is available (not ‘Two’, ‘Three’, ‘Regular’, etc.). How do I access these variations?
Chathura
January 11th, 2012 6:19 amI have the same problem with lost type co-op’s fonts. Would love to hear possible solutions regarding this problem.
Eric "WizKid" Odom
January 11th, 2012 9:25 pmI have the same exact problem. Windows 7, 64bit refuses to recognize any variants in .otf fonts I get from LostType. Help in this would be greatly appreciated!
Simon Clavey
January 15th, 2012 5:28 pmSpot on! .otf formats are not recognised by windows as multiple styles, there is a work around though, if you go to a free service such as font squirrel and convert to web format, it will make the .otf into a .tff which windows will recognise multiple TrueType styles. Hope this helps.
Steve
January 16th, 2012 9:54 pmI had the same issue. I went to my fonts folder and deleted the version of Lavanderia that displayed (even though I had installed all three). When I deleted that version, another version instantly replaced it. It’s like they all installed but windows will only recognize one at a time.
Jenn
January 10th, 2012 6:41 amI am in love with Bree. This is an amazing collection of free fonts. Thank you so much for sharing!
Sparklette
January 10th, 2012 8:33 amWhen I saw Lavanderia I knew I had to download it immediately. But did anyone have any issue getting it to look right in Photoshop? My small a’s and e’s end up with a huge curve at the back and don’t fit with the rest of the word.
Oh never mind, I figured it out. You can access the alternate characters in Adobe Illustrator, but not Photoshop.
JohnDesign
January 10th, 2012 1:51 pmNew fonts are always fun! Free fonts are even more fun!
I’m just giddy!
Raphael Pudlowski
January 10th, 2012 2:46 pmsome very nice fonts :) big thanx to all the authors!
Julien
January 10th, 2012 4:08 pmVery good selection of fonts, I downloaded almost all ;) Good work, Thank you.
Zakary Zide
January 10th, 2012 4:27 pmI tried downloading the Cassannet art-deco font.
Wanted to use it for my wedding invitation, no joke.
Even posted something to my Facebook page, as required, to receive it for free.
But alas, no font was delivered.
Anyone else experience this?
If so, how did you resolve the situation?
Thanks.
Jessica
January 11th, 2012 11:58 pmWell the link to post it to facebook/twitter was in a pop-up page so maybe you have pop-ups disabled? After you post it using the pop-up box, the link comes up at the bottom of the box.
Casey
January 10th, 2012 5:50 pmAwesome Post! Thanks for the new fonts!
Tribe
January 11th, 2012 12:52 pmFantastic. Instantly added to my ‘inspiration’ folder. Beautiful fonts.
Saves me a whole lot of time!
Emir Ayouni (@growcase)
January 11th, 2012 11:06 pmSeeing as there are many fonts in this round-up from Lost Type, I thought I’d voice my opinion.
I think it would be better to do a article on Lost Type and their unique Pay-What-You-Want Type Foundry.
Their fonts aren’t “free fonts”. They can be. If you’re stingy enough to type “0″.
What you’re doing by presenting their fonts as “free”, is only encouraging people to pay nothing.
My 2 cent.
Ezequiel Lancelotti
January 12th, 2012 3:02 amNice post, nice free fonts and nice re-design!! Congrats Smashing Magazine team, awesome work!!
Andy
January 12th, 2012 1:23 pmI always love these roundups, you guys do great work keeping my fonts folder fresh.
Paul Langston
January 12th, 2012 1:54 pmSome great stuff here – thanks a lot!
merran fuller
January 13th, 2012 8:31 amGreat post. Thanks for this. Very useful.
Jessica
January 16th, 2012 5:47 amWas anyone able to download Mosaic leaf font? By the time I got to it bandwidth had been exceeded – would anyone be willing to send it over to me?
Val
January 16th, 2012 5:48 amGreat selection! A couple of familiar faces and some new ones… thanks for the list!
A quick question:
I’ve downloaded Lavanderia and although it says it comes in three weights, I’m only getting Lavanderia Delicate in my font list.
Anybody having the same issue?
Paul
January 17th, 2012 11:21 amAwesome thanks for this.
Martin
January 17th, 2012 11:25 amGreat fonts, thank you for sharing.
Steve
January 18th, 2012 12:51 amFor those having trouble with Lavanderia, I e-mailed the lost type co-op, and the font’s creator replied and said to add copies of the font files to:
C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Adobe\Fonts
If you don’t have the Fonts folder (like I didn’t) just create one. This worked for indesign and illustrator, but not photoshop.
Jolene
July 13th, 2012 6:20 pmThank you Steve!!!!
Dee
January 18th, 2012 10:16 amYou guys are the best. And a big round of applause to all the designers.
Otto Rascon
January 19th, 2012 10:09 pmThese are some of the best fonts you guys have ever offered. Thank you!
Ulrich Gero
January 20th, 2012 10:11 amWow! these fonts are so nice… especially Bree Serif Regular
thank guys
Kaue Ribeiro
January 26th, 2012 7:00 pmNovecento does not seem to be FREE on Myfont’s website. Am I missing something or is this an error?
Simmessa
July 21st, 2012 7:03 pmNovecento ain’t free… no more, at least.
S.
Mubashar Ali
January 29th, 2012 12:16 pmIt’s a really informative topic. i was searching like one of them.
Fanahy
February 10th, 2012 10:23 amSharing is so wealthy. Thanks guys!
Marcin Białasek
February 13th, 2012 11:53 amDoes anyone have a link to download all of them?
Dinesh Kumar Shaw
February 13th, 2012 6:26 pmLovely fonts.Thanks for sharing.
Paul
March 5th, 2012 10:36 amI love this article, a great resource and interesting descriptions and cool links. Thanks!
world
April 11th, 2012 3:09 amThis is by far one of the best collections I’ve seen lately. Very nice!
Marcela
May 1st, 2012 6:57 pmWow! Thank you, beautiful fonts. In process of downloading.
However, wondering about the font used in your own site, it’s wonderful and so easy to read.
Thanks!
Joslyn
June 19th, 2012 4:45 pmThese are really great resources! I could really use a few of these in upcoming projects! I also found http://pilo.me through smashingmagazine and I am really glad this was mentioned by someone previously as I have been able to find about any font available there to try before I buy.
Thanks again for such an expansive list of fonts I can use!
rod
June 21st, 2012 10:06 amDont advertise free fonts and then ask people to pay for them
Douglas
April 15th, 2013 10:00 amThat’s kind of the trick. Not all free fonts are created equal. It’s hard to dig up the ones that have multiple weights, like the 3-4 basics, that are free. Here is a list of a few I dug up that could come in handy: http://bonfx.com/14-top-free-serif-fonts-with-multiple-weights/. It’s more critical for serif than san-serif typefaces because you aren’t really going to use an italic sans all that much. But you will need a bold and and italic (at the least) for your basic serif font, for body copy, to be of any use.
Mark
July 7th, 2012 6:20 pmNot for nothing, but most of these are NOT free…
diviaraj
August 9th, 2012 9:24 amGreat selection. I think we’re going to use Capability as our corporate font!