Kulturista
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Kulturista is a display typeface well suited for use in magazines and certain newspapers; five available weights are a perfect for the layout of various columns, titles, and supplements. The face may also work well as a basis a corporate style, it may be used on heavy machinery and equally well on the cover of a book dedicated to graphic design.
 
Basic Information
Relase date: 2009
Number of glyphs per font: 417
Number of fonts in a family: 10
Thin
Thin Italic
Light
Light Italic
Medium
Medium Italic
Semibold
Semibold Italic
Bold
Bold Italic
 
Supported Opentype Features
Case Sensitive Forms (case)
Ligatures (liga)
 
Font Format

OpenType only


 
Supported Languages

Afrikaans

Albanian

Basque

Belorussian (Latin)

Breton

Catalan

Chamorro

Crimean

Tatar (Latin)

Croatian

Czech

Danish

Dutch

English

Esperanto

Estonian

Faroese

Finnish

French

Frisian

Galician

German

Hungarian

Icelandic

Indonesian

Irish

Gaelic

Italian

Latvian

Lithuanian

Maori

Norwegian

Polish

Portuguese

Rhaeto-Romanic

Romanian

Sami

Scots

Gaelic

Slovak

Slovene

Sorbian

Spanish

Swedish

Turkish

 
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Kulturista preview
 
Kulturista is related to our Nudista typeface. Both faces share the elementary shapes, proportions and weight alternatives. While Nudista is a sober display face, Kulturista is a distinct linear typeface with sturdy serifs. The lopsided serifs of round strokes in lower case letters such as h, m, n prevent serifs on a single line of text from interfering with each other and they become a significant feature of the alphabet, together with the vertical serifs of numerals 2, 3 and 6.
Gently slanted italic has the same weight and colour as regular. It is not, however, only a slanted version of the regular cut, as often seen in typefaces based on geometric pattern. Whole set has its own structure, and the italic is an equal partner to the regular. The stem of f stretches below the baseline, round strokes of lower case letters sport elegant, rounded terminals. Round stem instrokes are also utilised in some lower-case x-height letters (i, j, p, m, n, r), which strengthens the emphasis of all italic styles.
Kulturista is a display typeface well suited for use in magazines and certain newspapers; five available weights are a perfect for the layout of various columns, titles, and supplements. The face may also work well as a basis a corporate style, it may be used on heavy machinery and equally well on the cover of a book dedicated to graphic design.