Clarika is driven by the core concept that a font family can provide both a geometric and grotesque set of sub-families, interchangeable to create a robust versatile type system.
Clarika Pro is based on the successes of the 2017 cut of the original Clarika. Enhanced with features requested by customers and revamped based on its use across mediums, Clarika Pro is a thoughtful evolution and adaptation. The family has been extended with deeper language support. It has been redrawn, re-kerned, and re-spaced for an even more distinguished look. Unique features have been added to the families such as duplexed numerals and currencies, enabling ways to present large amounts of data without losing alignment when bolding line items. To extend usability, Clarika Office is now available as a companion to Clarika Pro, mapping popular combinations of weights together for use within office applications such as Word or PowerPoint.
Within all Clarika families co-exists two sub-families, Clarika Geometric and Clarika Grotesque. Clarika Geometric is the backbone of the system defined by calculated precision, the balance of hard and soft geometry, and simplicity of form while Clarika Grotesque is refined by traditional cues, elegant page texture, and classic grotesque detailing. Unique notches and angled terminals throughout both sub-families invite negative space into counters allowing letterforms to become more legible and gracefully support an incredible range of weight options. Clarika is both a nod to the past and a step towards the future.
Character sets support over 200 Latin-based languages covering Western Europe, Central/Eastern Europe, Baltic, Turkish, Romanian, and Cyrillic languages. Equipped for professional typography, Clarika supports OpenType features include lining, tabular, and oldstyle figures, fractions, ordinals, superscripts, subscripts, and more.
Download Now Server 1 Download Now Server 3 Download Now Server 2 TT Marxiana is a project to reconstruct a set of pre-revolutionary fonts that were used in the layout of the "Niva" magazine, published by the St. Petersburg publishing house A.F. Marx. In our project, we decided to focus on a specific set of fonts that were used in the preparation and printing of the "Niva" magazine in 1887, namely its antiqua and italic, grotesque and elzevir. As part of the TT Marxiana project, we sought to adhere to strict historicity and maintain maximum proximity to the paper source. We tried to avoid any “modernization” of fonts, unless of course we consider this to be kerning work, the introduction of OpenType features and creation of manual hinting. As a result, with the TT Marxiana font family, a modern designer gets a full-fledged and functional set