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Gotham is a geometric sans-serif font family that has become a popular brand and sometimes associate with New York City. Created in 2000 by American type designer Tobias Frere-Jones, the font Gotham got its inspiration from the mid-20th century architecture letters in many NY City buildings.
Gotham Font Family is a geometric sans-serif typeface family designed by American type designer Tobias Frere-Jones with Jesse Ragan and released in 2000. Gotham’s letterforms were inspired by examples of architectural signs of the mid-twentieth century.
Gotham is a geometric sans-serif typeface family designed by American type designer Tobias Frere-Jones with Jesse Ragan and released through the Hoefler & Frere-Jones foundry from 2000. Gotham's letterforms were inspired by examples of architectural signs of the mid-twentieth century.
Gotham — Every designer has admired the no-nonsense letters of the urban environment. From these humble beginnings came Gotham, a hard-working typeface for the ages.
Complete family of 66 fonts: $1,045.00. Gotham Font Family was designed by Jonathan Hoefler and Tobias Frere-Jones and published by Hoefler & Co.. Gotham contains 140 styles and family package options. More about this family.
The bold architectural capitals that inspired the iconic Gotham typeface are merely the cornerstone of a versatile family of fonts. Four different widths in a range of weights, plus deep character sets, extended language support, and versions for different media, combine to make Gotham a powerful and indispensable design. Pairing Styles.
All 18 styles in Gotham Condensed 1 and Gotham Condensed 2, together at a $69 savings.
Gotham in use. Designed in 2000 by Tobias Frere-Jones [H&FJ] with Jesse Ragan (from 2001), following a commission from Arem Duplessis at GQ [Hoefler].
The Gotham family is available in eight weights—thin, extra light, light, book, medium, bold, black and ultra—each with matching italics as well as narrow, x-narrow and condensed widths. Get Gotham →
Jul 22, 2009 · Gotham was born in 2000, when men’s fashion magazine GQ commissioned New York-based Hoefler & Frere-Jones to create a new typeface for use in their publication.