November’s Font of the Month: Bradley DJR Outline

Font of the Month, 2025/11 PDF Try Buy $24
Bradley djr outline

For November, I’m sending you Bradley DJR Outline, a continuation of my Bradley revival that resurrects its outlined variant. American Type Founders published Bradley Outline in the late 1890s, a few years after the original design created by Herman Ihlenburg and based on lettering by Will H. Bradley.

This has been on my to-do-someday list for a long time, but never seemed like the most pressing thing. Bradley DJR is arguably the most holiday-coded font in my collection, and I needed something quick and easy to work on this month, so this seemed like the perfect moment to take my revival to the next level.

Bradleyoutline specimensofprint00amerrich

Bradley Outline as shown in ATF’s Specimens of printing types, 1897

The original Bradley Outline has a charming handmade touch, giving the font a very different feel than the mechanical strokes we can easily create in our contemporary apps. My version strives to find a midpoint between the two, toning down some of the round corners and wobbly line quality that would make it jarring in a crisp, modern design, while hopefully preserving most of its appeal.

Unlike a purely mechanical outline, this stroke subtly modulates its contrast to follow Bradley’s diagonal axis of thicks and thins. On top of that, it opportunistically pinches at thin strokes and tight intersections to create a little extra space—this is most apparent in the crossbar of a, the northwest and southeast corners of s, and the tight interior space inside f

At the last minute, I decided to add an interior stroke that separates the Outline from the Fill. (One reason this mailing is late again...I’m sorry!) Most of the time you probably won’t need it, but in some settings I think it really helps the letters pop!

Bradley djr outline 2

I’ve been making color fonts for nearly a decade now, but I still struggle to find an intuitive way to present them to users. 

Here I’ve included the Regular (Outline) and Fill fonts, for you to layer as you please. I’ve included color fonts with Red, Gold, and Silver palettes for you to work from, as well as SVG versions of these that will work in legacy apps. And like I did for Nickel, I’ve included a special style (“Color”) which uses the current foreground color in your application to set the Fill.

Please keep in mind that you can always upload these fonts to my Color Font Customizer or use CSS override-colors to create your own palette. And remember that you can use these layers and color fonts in combination with mechanical strokes and drop shadows to customize the look of the letters even further.

This update may be small, but it is mighty! I hope it helps you add a pop of color to your holiday designs, as well as the things you make in the year to come.

Bradley djr outline 3

October’s Font of the Month: Gimlet Sans Mono (Beta)

Font of the Month, 2025/10 Try Buy $24
Gimlet sans mono text sample 1200

Monospace fonts used to be specialty fonts, designed for typewriters, computer programming, and tabular data. But in recent years they have started to take on a more mainstream role in graphic design, offering alternatives to existing type styles that feel just a little more technical, data-driven, or peculiar. 

I’ve always been interested in how technical limitations can influence the aesthetic choices in a typeface, and how those choices often then take on a life of their own that transcend the original tech. I feel like this is what is happening with Monospace fonts, which you will often find used in contexts that don’t demand that text is set on a fixed-width grid. My typeface Input is one of many typefaces built around cultivating the feeling of “monospacedness”, even in its proportionally-spaced styles. 

At the same time, I’ve been a bit skeptical of the every-sans-needs-a-mono trend…are there really so many use cases for this, and will the sans just get watered down in the process? It was Ruggero Magrì’s idea to create a monospace for my revival of Forma, and it took some convincing to get me on board. But since Ruggero and I released Forma DJR Mono late last year, it has been eye-opening to hear from users how much they appreciate the addition to the family. It has made me reconsider what a general-purpose Monospace can and should be.

And this month I’ve been working on Gimlet Sans Mono, a monospace companion for my ever-growing quirkhorse Gimlet Sans.

Gimlet sans mono opsz waterfall 1200

With Gimlet Sans Mono, I tried to leave all of my Monospace baggage behind, and instead design a general-purpose sans serif that just happens to be monospace. I couldn’t decide which of Gimlet Sans’s optical sizes to use as the starting point for the monospace, so I monospaced them all. Is an optical size axis for a Mono useful to anybody? I truly have no idea.

Every monospace font has to confront a core liability: our letters vary in width and complexity, and cramming them all into a single space will inevitably get uncomfortable. It’s like forcing every person you know to wear the same size t-shirt—it may be a perfect fit for some, but others will be swimming in it or bursting at the seams.

Gimlet sans mono text sample 1 1200

Wide letters like M / W / m / w and narrow letters like capital I and lowercase i / l always require special attention. For the lowercase i and l, I waffled between the conventional three-serif style (see “Fictional” in the image below) and a quirkier flip-curl style that borrows from the bottom of c and t. The former spaced better, since it didn’t leave a huge gap on the lower left. But it just didn’t feel as interesting or emblematic of the typeface. I left it as an alternate, in case you disagree!

It’s important to note that, as the narrow and wide letters are getting stretched and squeezed, the negative space around them is getting stretched and squeezed as well. This creates an uneven rhythm in text, which is exacerbated by the fact that monospace fonts traditionally have no kerning to help with especially troublesome pairs.

Gimlet sans mono ulc 1200

At first I tried to do something similar to the “texture healing” approach popularized by Lettermatic’s Monaspace fonts for GitHub, which contextually widens letters like m and narrows letters like i when they appear in sequence. I really like this idea, but found this approach to be a little too overt for Gimlet Sans…I didn’t want to lose too much of the monospace flavor, and it was a little jarring to see different widths of the same letter appear in the same word (“filmmaker” for example).

I settled on a shift-kerning approach that leaves the letter shapes and widths as they are, but contextually shifts letters to the left or right in an attempt to balance out some of the unevenness. Essentially, I treat the narrow and wide letters like i and m as magnets that can either attract or repel the letters around them, without affecting the monospace grid. The effect is much more subtle than texture healing (maybe too subtle!), but it affects many more pairs.

Shift-kerning

This shift-kerning approach hacks the Monospace grid, but I also wondered if it would be useful to have a second version of the font that does away with the Monospace grid completely. 

Gimlet Sans UnMono has letterforms that are identical to the Mono, but with proportional spacing and kerning that are a little easier to take, especially at display sizes. My process was simple: I unset the bit in the font that officially makes it a monospace, narrowed the wordspace and some other punctuation like the period and comma, and copied in the kerning from the original version of Gimlet Sans (with a few tweaks here and there). 

I’m still not feeling sure about any of this, and I’m still changing things even as I am about to hit “send”...the fonts are very Beta. But I want to hear what you think about my little trip down this monospace rabbit hole. Shift-kerning…good or bad? Will you ever use the Optical Size axis or the UnMono version? I’m genuinely curious to know.

No kerning vs. shift-kerning vs. UnKerning

September’s Font of the Month: Kuhlman

Font of the Month, 2025/09 PDF Try Buy $24
Kuhlman cover 2000

Roy Kuhlman: Reluctant Modernist is an upcoming monograph about the graphic designer Roy Kuhlman. It will be published November 4 by Fantagraphics, an excellent publisher of comics, graphic novels, and books about visual culture (not to mention a frequent user of my typefaces!). 

I had the privilege of working with Steven Brower, the book’s author, and his collaborator Craig Welsh to design a typeface that celebrates Kuhlman’s designs and commemorates the book’s publication. And with the blessing of The Kuhlman Archive, I am delighted to be able to share the Kuhlman font with you today.

Kuhlman 3 2000

According to Brower, Kuhlman’s cover designs for Barney Rosset’s Grove Press in the 1950s were “at once, illustrative, abstract, conceptual, comical, serious and revolutionary.” Some of Kuhlman’s covers featured his distinctive hand-lettering style, which Brower describes as “conveying the ‘beat’ sensibility of the times.” He created this lettering using cut paper or Rubylith/Amberlith, a masking film on acetate. Brower continues, “Kuhlman would remove this film after cutting with an Exacto knife, leaving the desired forms in place.”

The dilemma of democratic socialism collier 2000

Brower and Welsh sifted through Kuhlman’s covers and compiled contact sheets of the letterforms in alphabetical order. Seeing the letterforms assembled like this really demonstrates the variety of weights, widths, and contrasts that Kuhlman employed across his covers. But at the same time it also exposes how consistent his other stylistic choices were: octagonal rounds, clipped diagonals, opportunistic horizontal stress, wobbly edges, and not-so-subtle misalignments. I knew a prefabricated typeface could never replicate the inventiveness of a designer with an Exacto knife, so my challenge with this font was to capture a bit of Kuhlman’s particular blend of chaos and consistency.

Contact sheet brower 2000

Collected letterforms from Kuhlman’s covers, assembled by Steven Brower

Never before has a typeface of mine called out so desperately for OpenType randomization. Kuhlman contains three separate alphabets that the font automagically cycles through. Because randomization sequences cannot extend across multiple lines, you can use the “Random Seed” variable axis to alter the starting point for randomization in each line of your text block and avoid repeating shapes.

Kuhlman abc 2000

My hope is that these automatic alternates will act as a baseline for randomization, and that you, the designer, will add your own playful spin on top of that.

To that end, I have also included a variable width axis that allows you to traverse the expansive range of Kuhlman’s work, from the broad, squarish letters of Little Peter in War and Peace to the slender letters of Black Skin, White Masks. (I’ve also started to rough in a third pole that gets closer to The Jewish Wife & Other Short Plays.) The width axis can also come in handy when justifying a text block—you can either apply your own randomness by mixing widths in a single line, or you can simply widen the entire line until it fits.

At the risk of it feeling a bit “autotracey”, I resisted the urge to clean up the vectors too much. Brower, Welsh, and I discussed how rough the font should feel, and settled on a middle ground where the crumpled edges preserve the rawness of the original design but are not so obtrusive that they distract from the letter’s essential shape. And in the whole typeface, there is nary a curve to be found.

Kuhlman widths 2000

I hope that, if nothing else, this font encourages you to explore Kuhlman’s work and maybe even get out your Exacto knife and do some cut-paper lettering of your own. And I probably don’t have to tell you how important preorders are in the book business these days, but they are. With that in mind, I encourage you to check out Brower’s book and consider ordering a copy!

Wishing you a wonderful month!

August’s Font of the Month: Job Clarendon Wide

Font of the Month, 2025/08 PDF Try Buy $24
Job clarendon wide 2 2000

I hope you’ve had a good August! Over here, my wide streak continues with Job Clarendon Wide, following up on the Narrow width that I sent you back in April.

I’ve been playing with wider versions of Job Clarendon since 2023, when I worked with co-creator Bethany Heck and designer Sophia Tai on a custom extension of the typeface for a client (the same project that yielded Job Clarendon Text). Sophia worked a lot on the wider end of that project, and her contributions are still evident in the fonts I am sending you today.

Scherer 2000

Wood type from Roman Scherer, ca. 1910. Courtesy of Letterform Archive. (See also Letterform Archive’s full scan of an earlier Roman Scherer specimen)

There is something kinda perfect about a wide-set Clarendon. I wish I could explain exactly why I feel this way, but I think it has to do with it sitting at this fascinating intersection between wood type clunkiness and mid-century modern elegance. It somehow manages to convey grace and sturdiness, workaday charm, and forthright boldness all at once…and it can be disarmingly cute as well!

I think because this style hits such a sweet spot, I struggled to produce a Wide cut for Job Clarendon that I was happy with. Bethany and I knew that we wanted to follow the tradition set by typefaces like Craw Clarendon and Volta. And we knew that we wanted to keep it low-contrast and slabby, and avoid letting it slip from Slab Serif into Modern territory (as Clarendons occasionally do). But early versions felt a little too clean and contemporary, and this month I’ve been working to pepper in more of the 19th-century grit that Job Clarendon attempts to capture.

Job clarendon wide caps 2000

Job Clarendon is getting to be such a big family that I now think of it in two chunks: the central core and the outer ring. The central core sets the “rules” of the type system, and is more-or-less predictable as it traverses the moderate weights and widths. In the outer ring, these rules are forced to bend as the typeface contorts to meet the demands of extreme weight and proportion.

I see Job Clarendon Wide forming the wider edge of the family’s inner core, in other words, this is the widest I think the typeface can get before it should start to get weird. And now with this Wide in place, I have the freedom to explore a funkier Extended width (maybe with flat tops and bottoms?) without worrying about it seeping into the central core of the family, thus avoiding the “pee in the pool” problem I discussed in April.

This Extended width is what I hope to explore next time. Until then, sending you my absolute best!

Structure 2000

July’s Font of the Month: Gimlet Sans Wide

Font of the Month, 2025/07 Try Buy $24

I’ve decided that I don’t have enough wide fonts in my library. Sure, I have stuff like Fit and Megavolt, but what I want is something less stylized. So for the rest of my summer, I’m taking a walk on the wide side.

With stretchiness and elasticity baked into its drawing style, Gimlet Sans already had one foot out the door. The typeface began as a single Black weight back in 2020, and that’s also where I chose to start the new Wide, Extra Wide, and Extended widths that I’m sending you today.

As 2000

This is just a quick update (for now), and I honestly don’t have a lot to say about it. But in a way that’s kinda the point of a wide font — you can fill a lot of space without having to say very much.

So on that note…here ya go! 😁

Caps 2000