The Highway font family is a set of sans-serif typefaces, evolved through the United States federal dual carriageway administration and used for avenue signage inside America. It includes the u.S., Canada, Ecuador, Venezuela, Chile…and Asian international locations prompted by American signage practices like Thailand’s Thai Script fonts or China’s “Prawat” design from 1935 which has been in use since 1955
The highway fonts are designed mainly for use by barrier corporations and country, county and city departments of transportation sign production stores to manufacture signs.
Highway Font Family
The highway alphabets are available in a variety of collections: B, C, D and E. All letters appear uniform with kerned spacing to meet DOT specifications so you won’t have any trouble reading the words or arrows on your way down the interstate.
Also Download: Yonky Slab 5 Font Family Free Download
Highway Intocable font is a new and free font designed by Matthew D. Reed in 2015 that can be used anywhere anyone wants to use this kickass font: on the runway, taxiways, signs at airports around the world.
The typeface set includes six fonts: a (the narrowest), b, c, d, e(m) (a changed model of “e” with wider strokes), and f. The first letters in the series cover only uppercase letters while “e” covers both lowercase and uppercase alphabets as well as numbers; this is because it’s one of the most used fonts on road signs – from massive limited-access highway to small street parking lot signage.
This font is so prevalent in our everyday lives that you can find it on posters, signboards and logos. Download this beautifully designed font from here to make your own posters for a chance at being featured on the site!
You’ve probably seen this font before without even realizing its name or where it came from- there’s no escaping it when one spends any significant amount of time walking down city streets.
check this font: Fz Roman 31 Italic Normal Free Download
You’re not alone if you don’t know what typeface Adobe Garamond Pro comes packaged with Microsoft Office; I sure didn’t, until now! Apparently over three million people use the program as preinstalled software (so does my school!) but have never bothered to check out all of their fonts available…which they could do by