Thicker Thin
Thicker Thin Upright
Thicker Thin Slanted
Thicker Thin Italic
Thicker Extralight
Thicker Extralight Upright
Thicker Extralight Slanted
Thicker Extralight Italic
Thicker Light
Thicker Light Upright
Thicker Light Slanted
Thicker Light Italic
Thicker Regular
Thicker Regular Upright
Thicker Regular Slanted
Thicker Regular Italic
Thicker Medium
Thicker Medium Upright
Thicker Medium Slanted
Thicker Medium Italic
Thicker Semibold
Thicker Semibold Upright
Thicker Semibold Slanted
Thicker Semibold Italic
Thicker Bold
Thicker Bold Upright
Thicker Bold Slanted
Thicker Bold Italic
Thicker Extrabold
Thicker Extrabold Upright
Thicker Extrabold Slanted
Thicker Extrabold Italic
Thicker Black
Thicker Black Upright
Thicker Black Slanted
Thicker Black Italic
Thicker Extrablack
Thicker Extrablack Upright
Thicker Extrablack Slanted
Thicker Extrablack Italic
Thicker Inline
Thicker Inline Slanted
Thicker Inline Italic
Thicker Destroy
Thicker is a type-family designed for Zetafonts by Francesco Canovaro with Andrea Tartarelli. A geometric sans typeface on steroids, it was first designed in the muscular extrablack weight with the aesthetics of high-power dynamic typefaces used in sports communication, and then developed in the lighter weights where the shapes show some vintage-inspired proportions and the slightly squared look that nods to Novarese famous Eurostile, eponymous with retro-futurism.
With these diverse influences the typeface allows for both impressive display use and effective logo design as well as more fine-tuned editorial use in body text - with a natural inclination for effective and powerful advertising. Sports typography usually uses italics to add dynamism and impact, and Thicker complies with this by offering a choice of three alternate italic forms with different slant, made even more customizable by the inclusion of variable font technology that allows fine tuning of the weight range as well as precise choice of typeface slant.
In each of the 44 weights of the typeface family (as well as in the all-in-one variable type solution) Thicker offers a extended charset of over 900 latin, cyrillic and greek glyphs, covering over two hundred languages and including useful Open Type features (Alternate forms, Positional Numerals, Small Caps and Case Sensitive Forms) for flawless typesetting.
Weights
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OThin
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OExtralight
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OLight
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ORegular
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OMedium
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OSemibold
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OBold
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OExtrabold
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OBlack
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OExtrablack
Features
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¡¿H?!Case-Sensitive Forms
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agStylistic Alternates
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HaloSmall Capitals
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CRecStylistic Set 2
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CYcStylistic Set 3
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RAGStylistic Set 7
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12/34Fractions
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1a2oOrdinals
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136Oldstyle Figures
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1234Tabular Figures
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012Alternate Annotation Forms
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H123Denominators
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H2O2Subscript
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H2O2Superscript
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H123Scientific Inferiors
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H123Numerators
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120Slashed Zero
Variable Typefaces
Thicker Variable
VARIABLE FONTS ARE ONLY AVAILABLE WITH THE FULL FAMILY PACKAGE, MAY NOT WORK WITH ALL THE SOFTWARE
European languages
The European languages are members of the same family. Their separate existence is a myth. For science, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocabulary.
The languages only differ in their grammar, their pronunciation and their most common words. Everyone realizes why a new common language would be desirable: one could refuse to pay expensive translators. To achieve this, it would be necessary to have uniform grammar, pronunciation and more common words. If several languages coalesce, the grammar of the resulting language is more simple and regular than that of the individual languages. The new common language will be more simple and regular than the existing European languages. It will be as simple as Occidental; in fact, it will be Occidental. To an English person, it will seem like simplified English, as a skeptical Cambridge friend of mine told me what Occidental is. The European languages are members of the same family. Their separate existence is a myth. For science, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocabulary. The languages only differ in their grammar, their pronunciation and their most common words. Everyone realizes why a new common language would be desirable: one could refuse to pay expensive translators. To achieve this, it would be necessary to have uniform grammar, pronunciation and more common words. If several languages coalesce, the grammar of the resulting language is more simple and regular than that of the individual languages. The new common language will be more simple and regular than the existing European languages. It will be as simple as Occidental; in fact, it will be Occidental. To an English person, it will seem like simplified English, as a skeptical Cambridge friend of mine told me what Occidental is. The European languages are members of the same family. Their separate existence is a myth. For science, music, sport, etc, Europe uses the same vocabulary.