Tremolo
Tremolo is a narrow, eclectic typeface that explores new territories of type design. It can render text austere or friendly, printed or painted — different styles and voices packed into a single design.
PDF Specimen- Latin
Design Concept
Tremolo is a collection of narrow and eclectic typefaces that explore new territories of type design. It is difficult to classify, containing elements of cursive calligraphy, brush lettering, and even condensed blackletter, which can render text austere or friendly, printed or painted – different voices packed into a single design. The Gradient styles with interlocking top and bottom styles, and Shadow styles with separate styles for the top and bottom layer, are designed for chromatic typography, and finally, the Sans is an engaging and warm humanist low-contrast typeface that completes the family.
Numeral Styles
Tremolo includes seven different kinds of numerals. Old-style figures come as default figures in Tremolo. It also, however, includes proportional lining figures, tabular numerals (both lining and old-style), superior, inferior, and small caps numerals. For running text, old-style figures work best; for use in capital setting, use lining figures.
- DesignNikola Djurek (Latin)
- ContributorsIgino Marini (Latin)
- AwardsTDC Typographic Excellence 2016
- Released2015
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
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- Swedish
- Catalan
- Polish
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- 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
- --
Double hyphen
ss02
This stylistic set replaces regular hyphen by its ornamented version. - &&
Alternative `&`
ss03
Decorative version of the ampersand. - HaHa
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. - HaHa
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. - ->->
Arrow formation
dlig
The discretionary ligature feature creates real arrows when you type the combination -> (right arrow), <- (left arrow), -^ (up arrow) or ^- (down arrow). - fifi
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. - 1919
Proportional Lining Figures
lnum, pnum
Typotheque fonts contain various styles of numerals within one font. Old-style Figures, also known as ranging figures, come standard in our text fonts. They are specifically designed to work well in running text, as they have the same proportions as lower case letters with their ascenders and descenders. The proportional Lining Figures feature changes standard figures to Lining figures which work better with all-capital text. - 1919
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. - 1919
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. - 2/92/9
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. - H1H1
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. - H1H1
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