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Yrsa

About

Intended for continuous reading on the web (longer articles in online news, magazines, blogs), Yrsa supports over 92 languages. A special consideration was given to Central and East European languages and proper shaping of their accents. A version that also supports 2 languages in the Gujarati script (Gujarati and Kachchi), is available as Rasa. In terms of glyphs included Rasa is a superset of Yrsa and includes the complete Latin, but in Rasa the Latin may be adjusted to support the primary Gujarati font.

It is a deliberate experiment in remixing existing typefaces: The Latin part began with Eben Sorkin's Merriweather. The Gujarati began with David Březina’s Skolar Gujarati.

To contribute, see github.com/rosettatype/yrsa.

Designers

Rosetta addresses the needs of global typography by working with collaborators to create original fonts for a polyphonic world. Their work has won numerous awards, but more importantly it has enabled people to read more easily in their native language. The Rosetta font library currently supports over 200 languages including Latin, Arabic, Armenian, Greek, Cyrillic, Inuktitut, and Indic scripts. Their fonts serve numerous clients including the BBC, RFE/RL, LG, and Harvard University Press.

GitHub | Twitter

Anna is a designer with many interests—she favors fonts and graphics when working, and illustration as a welcomed distraction. She holds an MA in Visual Communication from the University of Fine Arts in Poznań, and discovered her interest in pattern and calligraphy while studying in Vilnius, Lithuania. She designed Signika, a type family for wayfinding, and collaborated on the open-source type families Yrsa and Rasa, which support the Latin and Gujarati scripts. After freelancing for several studios, Anna now works with Rosetta.

Twitter | ancymonic.com

Dr David Březina is a typeface designer, writer, lecturer, and chief type officer at Rosetta type foundry. He designed typefaces for a diverse palette of the world’s scripts, but focuses mostly on Gujarati and Latin.

mrbrezina.com | Twitter

Choosing type

When you have some text, how can you choose a typeface? Many people—professional designers included—go through an app’s font menu until we find one we like. But the aim of this Google Fonts Knowledge module is to show that there are many considerations that can improve our type choices. By setting some useful constraints to aid our type selection, we can also develop a critical eye for analyzing type along the way.

Yrsa - Google Fonts