Liston font family


Designed by  khaidir in 2023

Liston is a modern multilingual elegant display font enhanced with ligatures, alternations, and strokes. Liston is a very versatile font character - with its seamless shapes and modern features it will cover a wide range of design projects from greeting cards to magazines, wedding invitations, websites, etc. The number of alternatives is incredible, from simple style alternatives to sweeps, ligatures, and alternatives.


Enjoy!

Liston Regular

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.
Liston


Select technical format and
language support of the font.
world-map map

STD / OT CFF

supports at least

21 languages.















Technical details
OpenType outline flavour:
CFF - PostScript-Outlines
Technical font names:
File name: LISTON REGULAR.otf
Windows menu name: LISTON
PostScript name: , LISTON-Regular
PostScript full name: , LISTON-Regular
Catalog number:
167722115
Characters:
302
16.79 incl. VAT
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Features

Kerning

Tag: kern

Function: Adjusts amount of space between glyphs, generally to provide optically consistent spacing between glyphs. Although a well-designed typeface has consistent inter-glyph spacing overall, some glyph combinations require adjustment for improved legibility. Besides standard adjustment in the horizontal direction, this feature can supply size-dependent kerning data via device tables, "cross-stream" kerning in the Y text direction, and adjustment of glyph placement independent of the advance adjustment. Note that this feature may apply to runs of more than two glyphs, and would not be used in monospaced fonts. Also note that this feature does not apply to text set vertically. The o is shifted closer to the T in the combination "To."