November Stencil

About

November Stencil is a heavy-duty stencil typeface with playful layering styles. Inspired by industrial signage, November Stencil gives a unique flavour to short texts and also provides surprising possibilities for colour typography and motion graphics.

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November Stencil Family Overview
  • Hairline
    Hairline
  • Thin
    Thin
  • ExtraLight
    ExtraLight
  • Light
    Light
  • Regular
    Regular
  • Medium
    Medium
  • Bold
    Bold
  • Heavy
    Heavy
  • Black
    Black
November Stencil Variable
Aa
HairlineBuy
ᐹᓐᒐᓗᐊᕐ
ThinBuy
ᐃᑕᓐᐳᕋ
ExtraLightBuy
ᐃᔅᑕᓐᐳᓪ
LightBuy
ᒫᓐᑕᕖᑎᐅ
RegularBuy
ᓯᖓᐳᐊᕐ
MediumBuy
ᐅᓛᓐᐹᑐᕐ
BoldBuy
Amsterdam
HeavyBuy
Amsterdam
BlackBuy
Amsterdam
November Stencil In Use

Syllabics Space, Punctuation, and Numeral Variants

The ideal proportions for Syllabics forms within a type system pairing with Latin result in the Syllabics being ideally 10-15% shorter than the Latin cap height. Additionally, the wide, open counter proportions inherent in Syllabics character forms result in the need for a significantly wider word space than that of the Latin script. To accommodate these inherent qualities of the Syllabics, November Stencil fonts provide Syllabics-specific word space, punctuation and special character, as well as numeral variants that a tailored to best suit the Syllabics. For more information about this, and other features specific to the Syllabics script, please read this in-depth article on Syllabics typographic guidelines.

November Syllabics and Latin Stencil specific word space, punctuation, and numeral variants

Square Form and Round Form Syllabics Styles

In Syllabics typography, there are two notable style traditions: the Round Form styles, which is traditionally used by Inuktut, Nêhiyaw (Cree), and Anishinaabe (Ojibway) Syllabics-using communities, and the Square Form style, which is the form that users of the Dene Syllabics identify with. These systems differ typographically in their proportional relationships, particularly in the contrast of full and medium height syllabic characters and uni-height letters, and width proportions. November Stencil fonts come in both versions.

November Syllabics Stencil family, with round and square form styles

Nunavik Local angma (ᖕ)

There is a local preference in Nunavik communities for the angma (ᖕ) finals character, which takes the graphical representation of a combination of ᓐ + ᒃ. This is in contrast to the local preference for this same character in Nunavut Inuktut communities who use Syllabics, who prefer the sequence ᓐ + ᒡ = ᖕ, which is the default representation of this character in Unicode.This is the same character with the same phonetic value across all communities, only that users from each community identify with their locally-preferred form. November Stencil fonts provide both form preferences.

November Syllabics Stencil Nunavut versus Nunavik angma local preference

Correct Dakelh (Carrier) Syllabics Forms

The Dakelh (Carrier) Syllabics diverge quite considerably from the other Syllabics orthographies used within Indigenous communities across Canada, and as such, there are many differences between the Carrier Syllabics and the Algonquian, Inuktut, or Dene Syllablics in regards to orthographic and typographic requirements. For several decades, the Dakelh Syllabics were incorrectly represented in the Unicode code charts, and therefore in many common Syllabics typefaces. Typotheque submitted this proposal to the Unicode Consortium to ammend the Syllabics code charts to correct the Dakelh Syllabics glyph representation. These revisions are present in the November Stencil fonts, accommodating the Syllabics forms that Dakleh users expect. Watch this video to learn more about our work in collaboration with the Dakelh and Nattilik local Indigenous communities in the Syllabics project.

November Carrier Syllabics Stencil incorrect and correct forms

  • Released2018

Arabic

  • Arabic
  • Persian (Farsi)
  • Urdū
  • Balochi
  • Pashto
  • Sindhi
  • Kashmiri
  • Chipewyan

Bangla

  • Bengali

Cyrillic

  • Rusyn
  • Kazakh
  • Russian
  • Abaza
  • Buryat
  • Dargin
  • Kabardian
  • Komi
  • Bulgarian
  • Chechen
  • Kirghyz
  • Macedonian
  • Ossetic
  • Serbian
  • Tajik (Cyrillic)
  • Ukrainian
  • Belarusian
  • Yakut
  • Abkhaz
  • Dolgan
  • Kalmyk
  • Adyghe
  • Avar
  • Dungan
  • Balkar
  • Karakalpak
  • Mordvin (Moksha)
  • Nivkh
  • Enets
  • Ingush
  • Itelmen
  • Kumyk
  • Azeri (Cyrillic)
  • Bashkir
  • Selkup
  • Nanai
  • Nenets
  • Lak
  • Lezgian
  • Mordvin (Erzya)
  • Tabasaran
  • Altai
  • Chukcha
  • Chuvash
  • Yupik
  • Even
  • Khanty
  • Koryak
  • Manci
  • Nogai
  • Tuva
  • Tatar
  • Uighur
  • Rutul
  • Tuvan
  • Moldovan
  • Mari
  • Aghul
  • Evenki
  • Khakas
  • Mansi
  • Nganasan
  • Tsakhur
  • Udmurt
  • Kildin Sami

Devanagari

  • Hindi
  • Marathi
  • Nepali
  • Sanskrit

Georgian

  • Georgian
  • Mingrelian
  • Laz
  • Svan

Greek

  • Greek (modern)
  • Greek (classical)

Gujarati

  • Gujarati

Gurmukhi

  • Gurmukhi (Punjabi)

Hebrew

  • Hebrew

Kannada

  • Kannada
  • Kodava
  • Badaga
  • Tulu
  • Beary
  • Sanketi
  • Konkani

Latin

  • English
  • Comorian
  • Luba-Kasai
  • Marquesan
  • Danish
  • Dutch
  • Italian
  • Haitian
  • Estonian
  • German
  • Friulian
  • Galician
  • French
  • Finnish
  • Fijian
  • Frisian
  • Luxemburgish
  • Spanish
  • Swahili
  • Breton
  • Bislama
  • Basque
  • Afar
  • Afrikaans
  • Zulu
  • Tetum
  • Portuguese
  • Norwegian
  • Swedish
  • Catalan
  • Polish
  • Slovak
  • Czech
  • Maltese
  • Albanian
  • Indonesian
  • Irish Gaelic
  • Latvian
  • Lithuanian
  • Slovene
  • Rhaeto-Romanic
  • Hungarian
  • Sorbian
  • Kurdish
  • Hawaiian
  • Esperanto
  • Welsh
  • Sámi (Northern)
  • Faroese
  • Greenlandic
  • Icelandic
  • Croatian
  • Romanian
  • Romani
  • Turkish
  • Bosnian
  • Phonetics
  • Sámi (Inari)
  • Sámi (Lule)
  • Sámi (Southern)
  • Vietnamese
  • Azeri (Latin)
  • Interlingua
  • Sanskrit transliteration
  • Malay
  • Māori
  • Turkmen
  • Uzbek
  • Tagalog (Filipino)
  • Malagasy
  • Crimean Tatar
  • Guaraní
  • Kashubian
  • Xhosa
  • Silesian
  • Cornish
  • Manx
  • Oromo
  • Somali (Latin)
  • Aymara
  • Ganda
  • Ido
  • Javanese
  • Gikuyu
  • Kinyarwanda
  • Kirundi
  • Kongo
  • Kwanyama
  • Nauruan
  • Navajo
  • Ndebele (Northern)
  • Ndebele (Southern)
  • Quechua
  • Samoan
  • Shona
  • Sotho
  • Sundanese
  • Tahitian
  • Tongan
  • Tsonga
  • Tswana
  • Twi
  • Wolof
  • Yoruba
  • Cheyenne
  • Chichewa
  • Kiribati
  • Swati
  • Pinyin
  • Arabic transliteration
  • Ladin
  • Igbo
  • Karelian
  • Veps
  • Chamorro
  • Marshallese
  • Montenegrin
  • Náhuatl
  • Norfuk
  • Occitan
  • Papiamento
  • Pedi
  • Sardinian
  • Seychelles Creole
  • Tok Pisin
  • Tuvalu
  • Aromanian
  • Ga
  • Gagauz
  • Ulithian
  • Venda
  • Chokwe
  • Chuukese
  • Kituba
  • Lingala
  • Maninka
  • Nyanja
  • Otomi
  • Palauan
  • Rarotongan
  • Sango
  • Temne
  • Umbundu
  • Bemba
  • Gwich’in
  • Scottish Gaelic
  • Tokelauan
  • Aranese
  • Cofán
  • Pictograms
  • Norn
  • Romaji
  • Old Norse
  • Chiquitano
  • Araona
  • Cavineña
  • Ayoreo

Malayalam

  • Malayalam (Reformed)

Meetei

  • Manipuri

Odia

  • Oriya

Ol Chiki

  • Santhali

Syllabics

  • Eastern Inuktut
  • Nunavimmiuttitut
  • Nattilingmiutut
  • Plains Cree
  • Woods Cree
  • Western Swampy Cree
  • Eastern Swampy Cree
  • Moose Cree
  • Eastern James Bay Cree
  • Naskapi
  • Oji-Cree
  • Northwestern Ojibwe
  • Ojibwe
  • Western Ojibwe
  • Blackfoot
  • Beaver
  • Carrier
  • Sayisi Dene
  • North Slavey
  • South Slavey

Tamil

  • Tamil
  • Paniya
  • Irula

Telugu

  • Telugu
  • Sanskrit
  • Gondi

  • a
    a

    Single storey `a`

    ss01

    Alternative version of the lower case letter ‘a’, including its accented variants.
  • Ha
    Ha

    Small Caps

    smcp

    Most Typotheque fonts implement the Small Caps feature. In Adobe applications you can replace lower case letters with small caps using the keyboard shortcut (⌘ + ⇧ + H), or the OpenType menu.
  • Ha
    Ha

    All Small Capitals

    smcp, c2sc

    There are two methods of applying small capitals. The first one replaces only lower case letters with small caps. The second method, All Small Caps, also replaces capital letters with small caps. It also replaces regular quotation marks, exclamation points, question marks, slashes and usually also numerals with small caps variants.
  • (H:
    (H:

    Case Sensitive Forms

    case

    When the ‘change to caps’ function is applied from within an application (not when text is typed in caps) appropriate case-sensitive forms are automatically applied. Regular brackets, parenthesis, dashes and hyphens are replaced with their capital forms.
  • (1)
    (1)

    Circled numerals and arrows

    dlig

    The discretionary ligature feature creates real arrows when you type the combination -> (right arrow), <- (left arrow), -^ (up arrow) or ^- (down arrow). It also creates enclosed numerals when you type numerals inside parenthesis, and inverse enclosed numerals when you type numerals inside brackets. Discretionary ligatures are off by default in Adobe applications.
  • fi
    fi

    Standard Ligatures

    liga

    Standard ligatures are those which are designed to improve the readability of certain letter pairs. For example, when this feature is activated, typing ‘f’ and ‘i’ will automatically produce the ‘fi’ ligature. Using ligatures does not affect the spelling and hyphenation of your text in any way.
  • 19
    19

    Proportional Old-style Figures

    onum, pnum

    Typotheque fonts contain various styles of numerals within one font. Proportional Lining Figures come standard in all our headline and newspaper fonts. Their proportions are specifically designed to work well with capital letters (for example, in headlines). The proportional Old-style Figures feature changes standard figures to Old-style Figures which work well in running text, as they have the same proportions as lower case letters with their ascenders and descenders.
  • 19
    19

    Tabular Lining Figures

    lnum, tnum

    Tabular figures are for use in tables where numerals need to be aligned vertically. Tabular figures are available as a OpenType feature and have a fixed width in all weights. Typotheque fonts include both Lining and Old-style Tabular figures.
  • 19
    19

    Tabular Old-style Figures

    onum, tnum

    Tabular figures are for use in tables where numerals need to be aligned vertically. Tabular figures are available as a OpenType feature and have a fixed width in all weights. Typotheque fonts include both Lining and Old-style Tabular figures.
  • 2/9
    2/9

    Arbitrary Fractions

    frac

    Typotheque OpenType fonts already include a number of pre-designed diagonal fractions. The fraction feature allows you to create other fractions quickly and easily.
  • H1
    H1

    Superiors

    sups

    Replaces all styles of figures (old style, tabular, lining) and letters with their superior alternates, which can be used for footnotes, formulas, etc. Superior characters are more legible than mathematically scaled characters, have a similar stroke weight, are spaced more generously, and better complement the rest of the text.
  • H1
    H1

    Inferiors

    sinf

    Replaces all styles of figures (old style, tabular, lining) and letters with their inferior alternates, used primarily for mathematical or chemical notation. Inferior characters are more legible than mathematically scaled characters, have a similar stroke weight, are spaced more generously, and better complement the rest of the text
  • ж
    ж

    Bulgarian Cyrillic

    Bulgarian readers prefer to set text in a variation of Cyrillic that differs from the standard Cyrillic by using shapes of letters based on cursive handwriting, where letters are easier to tell apart. Typotheque fonts use standard Cyrillic forms as default, and Bulgarian Cyrillic is applied when the text is tagged as Bulgarian. When the Localised forms feature is not available, you can also apply the same forms by using a Stylistic Set.
  • п
    п

    Serbian & Macedonian Cyrillic

    Serbian and Macedonian Cyrillic has different preferred shapes for some italic letters, which differ from the standard Cyrillic. Typotheque fonts use standard Cyrillic forms as default, and Serbian Cyrillic italic is applied when the text is tagged as Serbian Or Macedonian. When the Localised forms feature is not available, you can also apply the same forms by using a Stylistic Set.