- General info
- Available languages
- OpenType
- Background story
ITC Kabel® font family
Designed by Victor Caruso in 1976 and Rudolf Koch in 1927
Up to 5 Typefaces / 1 Value Packs
Supports at least 21 languages (Std / OT CFF)
Available licenses for all styles:
Supports up to 50 languages.
Please select a format to view the available languages:
Supports up to 5 OpenType features.
Please select a format to view the available OpenType features:
The first cuts of Kabel appeared in 1927, released by the German foundry Gebr. Klingspor. Like many of the typefaces that Rudolf Koch designed for printing use, Kabel is a carefully constructed and drawn. The basic forms were influenced by the Ancient Roman stone-carved letters, which consisted of just a few pure and clear geometric forms, such as circles, squares, and triangles. Koch also infused Kabel with some elements of Art Deco, making it appear quite different from other geometric modernist typefaces from the 1920s, like Futura.
Linotype has two versions of Kabel in its library. Kabel has a shorter x-height, with longer ascenders and descenders, making it a bit truer to Koch's original design than the second version, ITC Kabel, which was designed by Victor Caruso. This version, also known in the United States as Cable, has a larger x-height, shorter ascenders and descenders, more weights ,and a diamond shaped i-dot.
Typefaces in the same oeuvre include Avenir Next, ITC Avant Garde Gothic, Metrolite, Metromedium, Metroblack, and Erbar, just to name just a few."