Eurostile® Next Perfect Font Pairings

ABOUT THE FAMILY:

  • In the early 1950s, Alessandro Butti, with the assistance of Aldo Novarese, created the cap-only typeface known as Microgramma. Fonts were widely used for nearly a decade until Novarese introduced a lowercase version in 1962. The enhanced family was rebranded as “Eurostile.
  • The original Eurostile design was revitalized in 2008 by Akira Kobayashi, as “Eurostile Next.”
  • Eurostile Next is generally considered a display typeface. Only the light weight, in large sizes, is recommended for blocks of copy.
eurostile-next-Family

WHAT TO LOOK FOR IN FONTS THAT PAIR WELL WITH EUROSTILE NEXT:

Download a PDF version of the Eurostile Next Perfect Font Pairings and view the Eurostile Next font family.

Explore Other Font Pairing Guides

Cotford™

As a Transitional Serif design, the axis of Cotford’s the strokes normally have a vertical stress. Weight contrast is more pronounced in the display designs. Serifs are bracketed and head serifs are oblique. Cotford ranges from micro to display optical size, across Thin to Black weights, providing legible and stylish type at all sizes.

Akzidenz-Grotesk® Next

The Akzidenz-Grotesk font family debuted in 1898. Over the next 70 years, the family was expanded to over twenty styles. Akzidenz-Grotesk Next was developed as a cohesive family based on the principal shapes and characteristics of the earlier designs.