The repetition of simple geometric shapes forms a daily part of our environment. Throughout the 20th century – and into the 21st – typefaces whose designs have taken advantage of this have remained popular. But finding exactly the right mood can be tricky. For your convenience, we have grouped some of our favorite geometric typefaces (mostly sans serif and symbol) into four categories: circles, squares, ovals, and triangles.
Swiss designer Silvan Kaeser created the font Seebad™ in 2002.
Silvan Kaesar designed Seedbad after observing the unique sign lettering along the shores of Lake Geneva’s bathing area. Seebad's four different settings represent the cutting edge new style of Swiss design, which spans the bridge between modern and contemporary. Containing geometrically forms, Seebad has a narrow base. Some characters (the lowercase “t”, for example) display unicase, even uncial-like tendencies.
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Ramiz Guseynov created the fonts Cargo, Compass, Decima, Decima Mono, Dina, Egon, Fermo, Fermo-Uni, Fox Sans, Fox, Octa, Septa, and Volt.
Font Designer: Silvan Kaeser, 2002
Silvan Kaesar designed Seedbad™ after observing the unique sign lettering along the shores of Lake Geneva's bathing ar ea. The face's four different settings are representative of the new cutting-edge style in Swiss design, which spans the bridge between modern and contemporary. Containing geometrically constructed forms, Seebad is marked by it's narrow base. Some characters (the lowercase "t", for example) display unicase, even unicial-like
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