Enamela Font Family is a monoline square sans that is available in normal width and condensed versions. Although rooted in the early years of sans serif type, the Enamela fonts have a timeless quality that is practical and unpretentious. The letterforms derive from vitreous enamel signage dating from the Victorian era and widely used in Britain for street nameplates, Post Office signs, the plates on James Ludlow wall postboxes, railway signs and direction signs, as well as for circular Automobile Association wayfinding plaques throughout the first half of the twentieth century. The quirky terminals, stemming from the compression of geometric type, invite comparison with the Charles Wright fonts used for UK vehicle registration plates. Enamela and Enamela Condensed are both available in three weights – regular, medium and bold – and as italics (optically corrected obliques). A commonly used alternative M with a vertex that touches the baseline is provided at the Alt-M (µ) keystroke on a Mac, or Alt-0181 on Windows. A commonly used G with a plain vertical throat, no crosspiece, is assigned Unicode FF27 (full width capital G).
Preview Text Font
View all Glyphs Enamela Condensed Bold Italic
380 Characters
View all Glyphs Enamela Condensed Bold
380 Characters
View all Glyphs Enamela Condensed Italic
380 Characters
View all Glyphs Enamela Condensed Medium Italic
380 Characters
View all Glyphs Enamela Condensed Medium
380 Characters
View all Glyphs Enamela Condensed
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