Newbery Sans is a brand-new contrasted sans serif developed by Alejandro Paul and the Sudtipos group. As Paul has recently found inspiration from different German instructional books, Newbery Sans finds its preliminary motivations from the lettering work of E. Nerdinger and invokes the spirit of German styles but is imbued with personality all its own.
The concept was to make the letterforms more usable and ideal for everything from business branding to editorial. It is a sophisticated, practical family with contemporary detail that will effortlessly fulfill the needs of the screen and printed page. From a condensed thin to an expanded black, Newbery Sans supplies a functional workhorse system of 3 widths and 7 weights, each with the initial style of genuine italics, a selection of alternate glyphs and a complete set of little caps. Each weight is professionally crafted and consists of extended Latin support for Central, East and Western Europe languages. The font's name nods to its imagined usages in airports and street signage: Jorge Newbery was one of the first Latin American aircraft pilots, Newbery is the street where I live and it is likewise the name of Buenos Aires's local airport.
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