Commercial Type, Christian Schwartz, Berton Hasebe, Hrvoje Živčić, Ilya Ruderman, CSTM Fonts
Christian Schwartz and Berton Hasebe originally designed the dense, sober Feature for T: The New York Times Style Magazine. At the time, creative director Patrick Li and his team at The Times provided reference materials from the 1960s and 1970s, various interpretations of Times New Roman, and the concept of defaultness. Feature Display edges toward a more traditional fashion display face, with attenuated contrast and rounded terminals. In this optical size, Feature’s personality—industrious but pretty, sober but warm—truly shines. Although it’s perfect for headlines and titles, Feature Display can just as easily break out of an editorial context and go even bigger — for signage, posters, and environmental graphics. Feature Display comes with lots of alternates, such as a Q with a tucked-up tail that sits on the baseline for setting tight lines of caps, a fancy quadru-serif W, a Saturday Night Fever R, a wide-stance M, and other forms.
Standard ligatures, proportional lining figures, tabular lining figures, ordinals, fractions, denominator, numerator, subscript / inferiors, superscript / superiors, ten stylistic sets
Afrikaans, Azeri (cyr), Azeri (lat), Bashkir, Belarusian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chechen, Chuvash, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Esperanto, Estonian, Finnish, French, Gaelic (Irish), Galician, German, Hungarian, Icelandic, Ingush, Italian, Kazakh, Kurdish (lat), Kyrghiz, Latvian, Lithuanian, Moldavian (cyr), Mongolian (cyr), Mongolian (lat), Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovene, Spanish, Swedish, Tadzhik, Tatar, Turkish, Turkmen, Ukrainian, Uzbek (Cyr), Uzbek (lat)