100 px

  • General info
  • Available languages
  • OpenType
  • Background story
  • Related tags
Syntax Next® font family

Designed by  Hans Eduard Meier in 2000

Up to 1 Family / 1 Value Packs
Supports at least 33 languages (Pro / OT CFF)

Available licenses for all styles:

Supports up to 74 languages.

Please select a format to view the available languages:

Supports up to 13 OpenType features.

Please select a format to view the available OpenType features:

Syntax was designed by Swiss typographer Hans Eduard Meier, and issued in 1968 by the D. Stempel AG type foundry as their last hot metal type family. Meier used an unusual rationale in the design of this sans serif typeface; it has the shapes of humanist letters or oldstyle types (such as Sabon), but with a modified monoline treatment. The original drawings were done in 1954; first by writing the letters with a brush, then redrawing their essential linear forms, and finally adding balanced amounts of weight to the skeletons to produce optically monoline letterforms. Meier wanted to subtly express the rhythmical dynamism of written letters and at the same time produce a legible sans serif typeface. This theme was supported by using a very slight slope in the roman, tall ascenders, terminals at right angles to stroke direction, caps with classical proportions, and the humanist style a and g. The original foundry metal type was digitized in 1989 to make this family of four romans and one italic. Meier completely reworked Syntax in 2000, completing an expanded and improved font family that is available exclusively from Linotype GmbH as Linotype Syntax. In 2009 the typeface family was renamed into a more logical naming of "Syntax Next" to fit better in the Platinum Collection naming."

Syntax® Next font field guide including best practices, font pairings and alternatives.

Show more
Hide
1 Valuepack available in:
Show all

Syntax® Next Complete Family Pack

 (8 Typefaces) -  1 variant
From US$ 499.99
Add to cart
Add to cart