type.today
12 styles,
2021
  • Desktop
    $280
  • Web
    $280
  • App
    $1,120
48px
Gratimo Grotesk xLightGratimo Grotesk xLight
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
48px
Gratimo Grotesk LightGratimo Grotesk Light
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
48px
Gratimo Grotesk Light ItalicGratimo Grotesk Light Italic
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
48px
Gratimo Grotesk RegularGratimo Grotesk Regular
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
48px
Gratimo Grotesk MediumGratimo Grotesk Medium
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
48px
Gratimo Grotesk BoldGratimo Grotesk Bold
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
48px
Gratimo Grotesk Bold ItalicGratimo Grotesk Bold Italic
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
48px
Gratimo Grotesk BlackGratimo Grotesk Black
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
48px
Gratimo Grotesk Black ItalicGratimo Grotesk Black Italic
  • Desktop
    $50
  • Web
    $50
  • App
    $200
About

Grato and Gratimo are a system of typefaces joined by geometry but differing in genre and function. Grato’s geometric core is shared by two designs with different terminals and different uppercase proportions to make a Grotesk and a Classic.

And, for greater function and economy, both were redrawn for text and interface: Gratimo Grotesk and Gratimo Classic.

Carefully engineered, the system is a long-lasting companion for those who value diverse language support and strong screen performance. Grato and Gratimo support more than 260 languages across the Cyrillic and Latin alphabets and their glyphs have been carefully reviewed by skilled consultants. For best on-screen performance, all TrueType files for web and desktop have been improved with manual hinting.

Both Grato and Gratimo are available in two optical sizes. For larger sizes and purer geometry, they are tuned for branding and identity design.

Design by Jakob Runge, сontributions by Mona Franz. Consulting on Cyrillic by Ilya Ruderman & Yury Ostromentsky. Hinting by Christoph Koeberlin. Spacing/Kerning by Igino Marini.

Where Grato revels in pure geometry, Gratimo has a practical focus. It is a powerful workhorse that combines elementary shapes and precise construction. An utilitarian family purpose-built for everyday use. With a robust x-height, open apertures and generous spacing, its more restrained forms were the result of Grato being redrawn for reading. The result is a family of two typefaces with one (Classic) that draws on the humanist geometric types of Johnston and Gill to make something new and another Grotesk reflecting on American Gothics from the early 20th century.

For serious typography, Gratimo comes equipped with six weights, from Thin to sturdy Black. For greater distinction, its matching italics have some cursive character shapes, but give an oblique impression overall. A range of stylistic alternates can give a different accent to text: a more distinctive ›g‹ that evokes Johnston and others that bring out Gratimo’s geometry. Gratimo has what you need to organise data into information. Subscripts, fractions plus old-style and lining figures, each in proportional and tabular widths; a complete range of figure sets.

Features

Case sensitive forms, standard ligatures, proportional lining figures, proportional oldstyle figures, tabular lining figures, tabular oldstyle figures, ordinals, fractions, denominator, numerator, subscript / inferiors, superscript / superiors, slashed zero, seven stylistic sets

Languages

Afrikaans, Azeri (cyr), Azeri (lat), Belarusian, Bulgarian, Catalan, Chechen, Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Esperanto, Estonian, Finnish, French, Gaelic (Irish), Galician, German, Greek, 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 (lat), and others

Authors

TypeMates

TypeMates: a straightforward font foundry.

For years, we — Jakob, Lisa and Nils — have been passionate about type and in 2015 we started working together, from our offices in Munich and Hamburg, as a type foundry.

We don’t believe that typefaces are neutral or purely functional systems for reading, rather that they are a visual language with emotional values. Our aim is to be straightforward in the complex field of type design. We do not want to hype or praise type too much, we want to work together with our clients and partners to deliver good results.

Our practice covers everything, from the tiniest nuance in a logo or piece of lettering to the design of extensive type systems. And whether it’s a beautiful idea, a complex client project with intense technical demands, or we’re just following our investigative TypeMate’s nose — we’re passionate about well-made letterforms delivered to the highest technical standard.

Whether it’s Die Zeit online, Fast Company, Red Bull TV or Lufthansa Magazine, typefaces we designed are used by magazines, newspapers and corporations who set the bar for design.

Mona Franz

Mona is a freelance designer specialized in type and corporate design. She teaches type and typography at Hochschule München. In 2018, Mona graduated from the Royal Academy of Arts in The Hague with a TypeMedia master’s degree. In her final project, she developed Bridge Head and Text, typefaces now published by TypeMates. Her professional experience includes working with corporate agencies like MetaDesign Berlin, Martin et Karczinski and Blackspace, and the fabulous foundry Bold Monday. Due to her special interest, jobs that made use of her vector skills kept landing on her desk: the refresh of the Lufthansa crane logo, and the research and briefing for the new Lufthansa typeface. Mona loves to connect people and build bridges between different design disciplines.

Jakob Runge

From 2009 Jakob Runge has been fired by letters and type systems. After studying communication design at the University of applied sciences in Würzburg (BA) and then at Muthesius Academy of Fine Arts and Design in Kiel (MA), his master’s project was published as FF Franziska in 2014, and became a successful textface at FontFont.

A new dad, he works in Munich as an independent type and brand designer who specialises in developing typefaces and custom lettering for corporate and editorial design.

Alongside working in the design industry, Jakob is active in typographic education. Along with running numerous workshops at universities in Germany, Switzerland and Austria, he has been a lecturer for typography and type design at FH Münster from 2011. For him, type design is more than the foundation of precise and coherent communication: it’s a passion. twitter, website

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