How to Use Barlow: A Practical Sans Serif with Friendly Quirks

barlow cover

Welcome to Typogram’s FontDiscovery newsletter, written by your resident font and design nerd, Hua. Want to learn more about font and design? Subscribe FontDiscovery to get weekly doses of learning and inspiration♪


In This Issue…

How to Use Barlow for Logo and Branding

  • Font of the Week: Barlow
  • Design idea: Branding Trends
  • Color Inspiration: Mt.Fuji
Sample of Barlow
Sample of Barlow

Font of the Week 

About Barlow

Barlow is a practical sans serif with friendly quirks, perfect for startups. 

The California highway signs and buses inspired Barlow. Even though its style took a more practical approach, it still brings a sense of extra friendliness. It is a superfamily of fonts spanning across normal, semi condensed, and condensed versions, each with nine weights in regular and italics. By having so many weights and styles, Barlow is perfect for complex app interfaces. 

Barlow belongs to a category of fonts known as Grotesque Sans Serif, one of the earliest sans serif styles to be popularized. Because of this, Grotesques usually have a lot of visual quirks. The term grotesque also became a synonym for sans serif.

Font Detail

  • Extra bold dots on “i” and “j”
  • Slight stroke contrast
  • Stroke end is angled, with rounded stroke cap as opposed to flat angle and no stroke cap
  • Comes in regular and italic with nine weights. It also has Semi-condensed and condensed versions.
barlow-font-detail-1
barlow-font-detail
Font details of Barlow

How to use Barlow for logo?

Barlow has a good balance of friendly and functional. It is excellent for tech companies looking to create logos communicating simplicity and warmth brand personalities. Medium, Semibold, and Bold are especially great for startup/business logos.

How to use Barlow for marketing and branding?

Due to its many weights and styles, Barlow is perfect for complex websites, app interfaces as text, or display fonts. Its multiple weights can support complex information hierarchies like text-heavy projects. Because this font is relatively neutral, you can use a serif, with more font personality, like Bluu Next, to spice it up or a more classic serif, like Cormorant Garamond, to stay objective.

Barlow on Perfume packaging; source: FontsinUse
Barlow on Perfume packaging; source: FontsinUse
Barlow on a graphic poster; source: FontsinUse
Barlow on a graphic poster; source: FontsinUse

Design Idea of the Week

Branding Trends

Companies go through rebranding to update or change the public’s perception of them. Last week, we talked about the rebranding of Facebook. However, have you ever noticed that there seems to be a trend among industries? In recent times, there is a trend of startups having minimalism branding, in which startups are seen increasingly with minimalist, sans serif branding. (Why is that? We’ll talk about it in one of our future branding posts : )

startup-minimalist-trend
Soylent is an example of lifestyle startups with minimalist branding; source: soylent

Color Inspiration of the Week

Mt.Fuji

As winter is getting progressively colder, we share a color palette of the beautiful Mt.Fuji.

Crayola #709AF8 | Sakura #F3BCB9| Bark #462C2F | Pale Sky #9FD5FF
color-inspo
Mt.fuji; source: Wikimedia

Typography Jargon Buster

Bracket

Bracket is the area where a serif and a stroke are connected.

typopography-jargon-buster
Bracketing in letters

Creative Prompt 

Try making a marketing graphic with Barlow or with our color pallet this week!


Thank you

…for reading and hanging out here this week!  Barlow is available on Google Fonts. It also has Semi Condensed and Condensed versions.

barlow-infographic
Infographic of Barlow

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