Gaspo Slab font family
Designed by Daniel Peralta
Gaspo Slab is a fresh slab serif typeface that features esthetically pleasing curves, strong serifs, ample counters, humanist proportions and ink traps. The result is a very functional font with a contemporary design and highly readable at small sizes. Gaspo Slab consists of 7 weights, from Ultra Light to Black, with matching italics. This family comes with a 434-character set that includes European diacritics, tabular figures, alternative characters, numerators and fractions, making it possible to use the font in 128 different languages. The font is well-suited for headlines, medium-length text, magazines, newspapers, advertising, corporate use and product design.
Gaspo Slab Black Italic
Desktop fonts are designed to
be installed on a computer for
use with applications.
Licensed per user.
Annual web fonts are licensed for a set number of page views.
Annual web fonts are licensed
for a set number of page views.
Application licensing allows fonts to be embedded in your software applications. The license may be based on the number of titles or the number of installations.
Electronic Document Fonts can be
embedded in an eBook, eMagazine or
eNewspaper. Fonts are licensed
annually per issue.
Server fonts can be installed on
a server and e.g. used by automated
processes to create items.
A license is per server core CPU per year.
A Digital Ads license allows you to embed web fonts in digital ads, such as ads created in HTML5. These license is based on the number of ad impressions.
Gaspo Slab
Select technical format and
language support of the font.
language support of the font.
Technical details
OpenType outline flavour:
CFF - PostScript-Outlines
Technical font names:
File name: GaspoSlab-BlackIt.otf
Windows menu name: Gaspo Slab Black It
PostScript name: , GaspoSlab-BlackIt
PostScript full name: , Gaspo Slab Black It
Windows menu name: Gaspo Slab Black It
PostScript name: , GaspoSlab-BlackIt
PostScript full name: , Gaspo Slab Black It
Catalog number:
167477584
Characters:
434