Across the three styles there are a number of useful OpenType features which make Vulpa capable of demanding typographic work, even though there are only three styles. Regular, italic and bold are all you really need anyway! The regular and bold weights both include small caps, and the italic features swash capitals for most letters. The italic also features quaint discretionary ligatures, and all styles include standard ligatures, automatic fractions, proportional and tabular, lining and oldstyle figures.
If this isn't enough, the Vulpa family also includes Ornaments and Drop-Cap fonts. There is an ornament for A to B, a to b and 0 to 9. These have been carefully designed to match the feel of the text fonts, and many are influenced by ornaments and fleurons from the ATF 1912 Type Specimen book. The drop-caps have an engraved look, and two color versions can be made by overlaying upper and lower case.
Despite the lack of weights compared to 'workhorse' faces, the charm and versatility of Vulpa make it a really useful typeface, that I hope you'll enjoy using as much as I enjoyed making.
The text fonts were spaced and kerned by Igino Marini of iKern.
Font Family:
· Vulpa
· Vulpa Italic
· Vulpa Bold
· Vulpa Drop Caps
· Vulpa Ornaments
Tags: alternates, automatic fractions, book, borders, cap eszett, capital sharp s, classic, curly, dingbats, drop caps, figures, flourished, flowers, foxtail, foxy, frames, garalde, italics, leaves, ligatures, multilingual, oldstyle, oldstyle figures, opentype, ornaments, plantin, quaint, readable, remember_serif, serif, small caps, swash, text, versal eszett, versatile, warm