Gwen
字体介绍:
Gwen is a variable type system in 7 weights. The complete font family consists of two subfamilies: the highly characteristic Display Serif family which shows its full potential and beauty in big sizes and a more subtle Text variation appropriate for smaller sizes. The variable font combines the best of both worlds and provides unique flexibility to switch between all of the font weights and the text and display style at the same time. The font supports Extended Latin and Cyrillic scripts and its main purpose is to be used in editorials, although it may find good implications in headlines, impactful landing pages, posters, and packaging.
Afrikaans (also Cape Duch, Cape Afrikaners, and West Germanic language of South Africa), Asu, Belarusian (also Lachinka), Bemba, Bena, Bulgarian, Breton, Bosnian (Cyrillic), Catalan, Chechen, Kiga (also Rukiga, Ruchiga, and Chiga), Czech, Welsh, Danish, Taita, German, Lower Sorbian, Jola (also Jola-Fonyi, and Kujamataak), Embu, English, Esperanto, Spanish, Estonian, Basque, Finnish, Filipino (also Modern Philippines), Faroese, French, Friulian, Western, West Frisian, Irish, Scottish, Gaelic, Galician, Swiss, German, Gusii, Manx Gaelic, Croatian (also Gaj’s Latin alphabet, Abeceda, and Gajica), Upper Sorbian, Hungarian, Indonesian, Icelandic, Italian, Machame (also Kimachame), Kamba, Makonde (also Kimakonde), Kabuverdianu (also Cape Verdean Creole, Kriolu, Barlavento, and Sotavento), Kikuyu, Greenlandic (also Kalaallisut), Kalenjin, Shambala (also Kishambala, (ki)Sambaa, and (ki)Shambaa), Colognian (also Kölsch), Cornish, Luxembourgish, Ganda (also Luganda), Lithuanian (also Lithuanian Lietuviu Kalba, and East Baltic language), Luo (also Lwo, and Lwoian), Luyia (also Luyia, Luhia, and Luhiya), Latvian, Meru, Mauritian Creole (also Morisyen), Malagasy, Makhuwa-Meetto, Macedonian, Maltese, North Ndebele (also isiNdebele saseNyakatho, and Zimbabwean Ndebele), Dutch, Norwegian (also Nynorsk, and Bokmål), Nkore (also Nkole, Nyankore, Nyankole, Orunyankore, Orunyankole, Runyankore, and Runyankole), Oromo (also Afaan), Ossetian (also Ossetic, and Ossete), Polish, Portuguese, Quechua (also Runasimi), Romansh, Kirundi (also Rundi), Romanian, Rombo (also Kirombo), Russian