⚞¡LA FIESTA ESTA AQUI!⚟

The island of Fuerteventura is more known for its white sand beaches and windsurf-friendly constant winds than for its typographical marvels. Still, it's on the walls of a ballroom next to its white-sand beaches that Debora Manetti found the hand-painted sign that she took as inspiration for the design of this typeface.
☞Mambo No.5____
hääleõiguslike markedsøkonomi preukázateľne
tillväxtpakten fotoğrafçılık équipe reúnen
caraïbische starogruojčice citroën líbýu
stracké múltiples bangladéšané sąsiedztwie își
sazîkin stratēģiskajām hijó miġbuda gôndola
parlâmentoya qindvjeçarëve indoeuropiečių
bölünmüşlüğüne môre empréstimo cefalù
Salad Extralight
Salad Extralight Italic
Salad Light
Salad Light Italic
Salad Regular
Salad Italic
Salad Bold
Salad Bold Italic
Salad Extrabold Italic
Salad Extrabold
Salad Interlock Extralight
Salad Interlock Light
Salad Interlock Regular
Salad Interlock Bold
Salad Interlock Extrabold
Salad Inline
The island of Fuerteventura is more known for its white sand beaches and windsurf-friendly constant winds than for its typographic marvels. Still, it's on the walls of a ballroom next to its white-sand beaches that Debora Manetti found the hand-painted letterforms that she took as inspiration for her typeface Sala de Fiestas. The resulting font was a condensed sans serif full of curious details and a jumpy latino vibe that many years after still keeps its freshness and vernacular charme.
Francesco Canovaro took the original typeface as a starting point for a grand tour into signpainter aesthetics, developing a reboot of the original into a new type family: Salad. While being faithful to the original proportions and feeling, Salad provides extreme versatility through its five-weights range, its extended charset and its set of Open Type features including stylistic sets, alternates, positional numerals, small capitals and case sensitive forms.
While the roman family with its italic counterpart provide a good workhorse tool for informal branding, packaging and editorial projects, the interlocking and the inline weights add additional possibilities for display purpouses. This is enriched by the inclusion in the typeface of a set hand-drawn decorative dingbats that further complement the signpainting vibe of the family. All Zetafonts expertise in handmade lettering, typographic design and water sports has been put to test to assure Salad is the best typographical alternative to a a trip to Canary Islands!
Features
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fl fiStandard Ligatures
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(¡HO!)Case-Sensitive Forms
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we+Discretionary Ligatures
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AbagoSmall Capitals
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casaStylistic Set 1
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OggiStylistic Set 2
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CJWQcwyStylistic Set 3
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ninja!...Stylistic Set 5
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12.95Stylistic Set 6
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12/23Fractions
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1a 3thOrdinals
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12360Oldstyle Figures
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H123Alternate Annotation Forms
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H123Denominators
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H123Subscript
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H123Superscript
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H123Numerators
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01Slashed Zero
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(Yo!___)dlig special char1
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‘---Bah!?’dlig special char2
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skullBuh!!!dilg special char3
Variable Typefaces
Salad Variable
VARIABLE FONTS ARE ONLY AVAILABLE WITH THE FULL FAMILY PACKAGE, MAY NOT WORK WITH ALL THE SOFTWARE
Leafy vegetables
IN COMMON PARLANCE, SALAD OFTEN REFERS TO THE SIMPLEST VARIANT OF THIS RECIPE, THE SO-CALLED GREEN SALAD, PREPARED ONLY WITH RAW LEAFY VEGETABLES WASHED WITH RUNNING WATER, SOAKING, RINSING OR USING SPECIAL CENTRIFUGES, USUALLY A VARIETY OF LETTUCE
The word "salad" derives in English from the French salade with the same meaning, in turn, a shortened form of the previous vulgar Latin 'herba salata' (salted vegetables), from the Latin 'salata' (salty), from 'sal' (salt). In English, the word first appears as "salad" or "sallet" in the 14th century. Salt is associated with salads because vegetables were seasoned with brine (a solution of salt in water) or salty dressings made from oil and vinegar in Roman times. The phrase "salad days", meaning "time of youthful inexperience" (based on the notion of "green"), is first recorded by Shakespeare in 1606, [1] while the use of salad bar, referring to a serving buffet of salad ingredients first appeared in American English in the 1960s.