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WhenIstartedthe◊em{TypographyforLawyers}project,Iwasasked"MB, you've designed fonts before. Will you ever design one for lawyers?"
Ofcoursenot,Ithought.Lawyershadn't even scratched the surface of the many excellent professional fonts already available.
But over time, lawyers kept nudging me — "it would be great if a font could do such-and-such …" After all, many of today'sfonts—including◊xref["a-brief-history-of-times-new-roman.html"]{TimesNewRoman}—wereinventedtosuittheneedsofearlierpublishers.Whynotlawyers?
Likemosttypedesigners,Ifounditimpossibletoresistaninvitationtoexploreanewrealmoftypographicgeekery.ButI'm also happy to share the results with you: the ◊strong{TFL Fonts}, a set of four font families inspired by the needs of legal writers.
The second edition of ◊em{Typography for Lawyers} uses all four: ◊xref{Equity} for ◊xref{body text}, ◊xref{Concourse} for captions and instructions, ◊xref{Triplicate} for typewriter-style samples, and ◊xref{Advocate} for headlines and the front cover. (Of course, you'realsoreadingthemrightnow.)
"Will these fonts comply with my local court rules?"Ican't offer legal advice. But I can say that thousands of lawyers have been using the TFLFonts without incident. In fact, they regularly tell me that judges, clients, and even opposing counsel notice & admire the appearance of their documents.
◊em{Opposing counsel?} So I'mtold.Yourmileagemayvary,however.