Looking at some specimen books of printing types of late 19th century, I discovered many ornamented capitals for headings amongst the typefaces. The majority of them showed a flourish like a tuscan serif - a particular quality of a strange capital lettering made with brush. Gown is the outcome of the mash up between that impact and the Didone style - best for display screen. To embellish, to embellish, to dress a design piece is the intention of this household, adapted to the twenty-first century. The font style must embellish book covers, publications, product packagings, movie posters, greeting cards, stationery, amongst other uses.
Started up by the author's hand, Dress is an expert work, precise, well spaced, with ligatures and alternates for uppercases, initials, endings and figures. Each variable contains more than 1200 glyphs with plenty of OpenType features and substantial Western, Central and Eastern European language assistance. The characters of the tones, inlines and outlines were not immediately made. Instead, they were drawn one by one in order to look after every detail, even the change of pressure of the hairlines.
The main member of this household is the Base font which can be utilized alone or decorated with the layers: Shade One or Shade 2, Inline One or Inline 2 and Outline. In this method, experienced designers will develop their own combinations. On the other hand, there are multi-layered font styles that make Gown easier to use: Gown Combination One to 5. In Addition, Gown Deco adorns the beginning and the ending of the words (1) while the Ornaments decorates the entire style. The family package consists of all this thirteen options.
Let's Dress your work!
You can find a User Guide in the Gallery Section.
Font Family: