No. Styles / Fonts

3

Opentype Options

a
e
i
m
b
f
j
n
c
g
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o
d
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p
Crave Script image
Crave Script - Angels image
Crave Script - Yakuza image
Crave Script - Comparison image
Crave Script - Heavenly Orbits image
Crave Script image
Crave Script - Numerals image
Crave Script - Rarified image
Crave Script - Ganymede image
Crave Script image
Crave Script - Angels image
Crave Script - Yakuza image
Crave Script - Comparison image
Crave Script - Heavenly Orbits image
Crave Script image
Crave Script - Numerals image
Crave Script - Rarified image
Crave Script - Ganymede image
Crave Script image
Crave Script - Angels image
Crave Script - Yakuza image
Crave Script - Comparison image
Crave Script - Heavenly Orbits image
Crave Script image
Crave Script - Numerals image
Crave Script - Rarified image
Crave Script - Ganymede image

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Glyph Grid

Description

Elegant, indulgent, and filled with typographic elements that creatives crave, the Crave™ typeface families explore the influences of its predecessor, Lust™ by Neil Summerour, and then deliberately departs in more refined and unexpected ways to deliver a mainstay typographic collection all creatives can use. There have been variations of Crave circulating since 2016 as part of private commissions or experimental sets, but Summerour continued to iteratively refine and expand on what might be needed now and in the future, building out robust character sets, expansive alternates, and optical sizes in hopes of providing a truly useful set of display typefaces. The three Crave optical families: Standard, Display, and Fine each include true italics, small caps, multiple numeral sets, smart ligatures, and extensive language support.

The Crave Script fonts provide an over-the-top collection of alternatives, swashes, whorls, loops, all refined in Summerour’s signature style and attention to detail. The most subversive family in the collection, Crave Aura, contains three optical sizes and six weights and truly focuses on over-delivering on emerging explorative typefaces that disruptively infuse excess and voluptuous forms in unexpected ways. This level of typographic excess is what Summerour is known for, and Crave Aura raises the bar on how to responsibly and cohesively deliver on what he refers to as Neo-Nouveau typefaces by refusing to producing a singular, one-off font and instead delivering an expansive family to bolster the tools afforded the creative user.