handwriting — ballpoint pen — individual — personal — handwritten — script — authentic — crumbly — ligatures — feminine — tabular figures — female — woman — Eastern & Central European — variable font — stylistic alternates As the name suggests — the Iris’ Hand is a woman’s personal handwriting, written with a ballpoint pen.
Iris’ Hand is an amazing font — almost indistinguishable from “real” handwriting. Thanks to the over 200 different ligatures — i.e. the combinations of letters — and alternative character forms the typeface is extremely lively and varied.
Really handwritten
In order to preserve the liveliness of the handwritten original in the font, different forms of glyphs appear in the ligatures of the Iris’ Hand, so that, for example, an e looks different almost every time, depending on which letter it is (or isn't) connected to.
In addition to all the letter combinations, the double letters and numbers (aa, ff, AA, MM, 22, 66, ...) are also built as ligatures with alternative forms.
As if by magic
Requirement for the automatic application of the ligatures is that your application supports OpenType-features. Typically, most programs have at least the ligatures feature enabled by default. Then the alternate character forms automatically appear as if by magic when entering text and make the text look convincingly handwritten.
Other OpenType features such as “initial or terminal forms,” “discretionary ligatures,” or “fractions,” and others may need to be activated separately.
From light to bold
The ballpoint pen actually offers almost no possibility of consciously influencing the writing ductus. And yet the ballpoint pen also has its own characteristics, which are clearly expressed in this font. The stroke is not always uniformly thick. Sometimes only a delicate, thin line is created. Often it breaks off suddenly and leaves a gap.
The Iris’ Hand goes even further: In addition to the “normal” version, it is also available in a thinner (Light) and a stronger version (Bold).
More or less oblique
Handwriting is sometimes written more or less slanted. So does Iris’ Hand. The normal version is only slightly slanted. But there is also an italic version that is significantly more inclined by 20°, which makes the script appear more regular and somehow feminine.
The Iris’ Hand is also a variable font! This means that there are not only the usual individual styles — a font file for each style — but when using the variable font, all variations are available in a single font file. And every intermediate level can be created and displayed with it — as long as the software supports this still young font format. •
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Iris’ Hand
6 fonts: Light, Regular, Bold & italics
+ variable fontFeatures: ligatures, stylistic alternates, etc.
Language support: ISO 8859-1 Western European, Central & Eastern European, Turkish
Price: 82,— EURIf you need more than one license, just ask — we offer quantity discounts.
Test before
Features: none
Character set: A—Z resp. a—z
Price: freemore…
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Size:
Weight:
Italic: