![]() Raleway is an elegant font with standard ligatures, which was originally designed as a single weight by Matt McInerney. It comes in three different weights and two variations, with sleek lettering and a great use of tracking, which gives the text an elegant look. This classy font was, of course, inspired by the immortal Audrey Hepburn, and created by Cristina Pagnotta. However, if you happen to need a font that does support unusual languages for one of your projects, you know where to look. It contains a few rather unusual diacritic letters which enable it to support Cornish, Guarani, Malagasy, and plenty of other languages that none of us are familiar with. Foobar Proįoobar Pro is a sans serif font with some truly amazing language support. It’s a simple, no-nonsense font which wouldn’t look out of place on any heading and with six different weights available. Overpass is an open-source font inspired by Highway Gothic and sponsored by RedHat – the folks behind the Linux distro with the same name and Fedora. It’s perfect for sites looking for a typeface that complements a minimalist look, but that can also be used to great effect in sleek headings. Penna is a unique font with thin stems and slanted strokes, which give it quite a playful look. Its letters go from the sleek to the robust, making the font quite visually striking. Gentona is a sans serif font designed to be used across a wide range of designs, with an emphasis on contemporary sensibilities and inspired other grotesque typefaces. Its designer, Jasper de Waard, worked on this typeface for approximately two years, starting when he was just 16 years old (by then he already had a font up on Google Fonts). It was created to work well across a wide variety of resolutions, making it usable both for text-based projects and large designs. Proza is a sans serif font whose design was inspired by Renaissance typefaces such as Garamond and Jenson. They’re well suited for high-density text designs, but mostly excel when it comes to creating titles and headings. The Glober family of typefaces (which encompasses 18 different weights) is defined by its stylish geometric designs with softened finishes. Its letters are noticeably condensed, with high cap-heights and thin stems – giving it a clean, modern look. DyeLineĭyeLine is a font with a distinct geometric design, inspired by the clean lines of architectural drawings and blueprints. It’s a somewhat geometric typeface, with short arms and prominent bowls, and comes in seven different variations with multiple OpenType features. BitnerĪccording to its creators, the design of this font was inspired by the cryptocurrency movement – Bitcoin mining, to be more specific. The font comes in six different weights and its kerning can be manually edited. It combines geometric design with soft lines, resulting in a very pleasing effect. Baufraīaufra bills itself as a humanist sans serif font, influenced by those of the early 20th century. This lends itself pretty well to any designs which require a little bit of additional weight to them. ![]() Corbert Condensed ItalicĪs its name implies, this font is the condensed version of the original Corbert font, with its letters being 15% closer than those of its parent. This serves to pull the eye upwards, and with a little tracking, you can obtain pretty pleasing results as far as headings go. Simplifica is a sans serif font which is easily distinguished thanks to its uniform design, with thin stems and short arms. Its letters are somewhat condensed and they have pretty short arms, giving them a stocky, solid feel perfect for sober titles. AileronĪileron is available in ten different styles, ranging from the ultra-thin all the way to the bold. The typeface features a simple, bold design with multiple weights, which lends itself perfectly to any no-nonsense heading. Bebas Neueīebas Neue is a pretty popular sans serif font – so popular in fact, that its creators aren’t afraid to refer to it as the “Helvetica of the free fonts”, and it’s pretty easy to see why. Otherwise, we recommend the Use Any Font plugin, which takes care of all the code behind the scenes and only requires you to upload the font files using an intuitive interface.ģ0 Sans Serif Fonts Perfect for Website Headings 1. If you want to go the manual route, you can install each font you intend to use via CSS, which shouldn’t take long at all. The entire process is straightforward, and we’re pretty sure most of you are already familiar with it – but just in case, let’s go over the two simplest methods to install additional fonts for use in WordPress. How to Add Fonts to Your WordPress Website ![]()
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