Vollkorn is a quiet, modest and well working body copy typeface for bread and butter use. It has dark and meaty serifs and a bouncing and healthy look and might be used as body type as well as for headlines or titles. More than 2000 glyphs per font support a wide range of languages in Latin, Cyrillic and Greek scripts. "Vollkorn" [pronounced "follkorn"] is German for "wholemeal". It refers to the old term "Brotschrift" [literally "bread type"] which described the small fonts for every day use in the days of hand-compositing. Vollkorn came into being as Friedrich Althausen's first type designing attempt during his studies at Bauhaus University Weimar, Germany. The Regular style was initially published in 2005 under a Creative Commons license. When GoogleFonts launched in 2010 Vollkorn was one the first twenty featured fonts. ok sthen@
3 lines
112 B
Plaintext
3 lines
112 B
Plaintext
SHA256 (vollkorn-4-105.zip) = 5lDqnZZ8KvHpuNNOERhyFyi81zzP0yINpCZGYTAeivU=
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SIZE (vollkorn-4-105.zip) = 11046213
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