Mannered, funky, decorative, and stately: our typeface Lyric sings in a surprisingly broad range. The included variable font gives you control to find the sweet spot anywhere in between its six weights and three widths. You may have seen this one before—it has already been used beautifully for several restaurant identities, book designs, and packaging systems. Jesse started Lyric early in his career, and he has finally picked it up again with an eye toward finishing it.
Lyric is a synthesis of a variety of historical sources, updated for contemporary use. Spiral-curled loops in place of ball terminals; delicate long serifs, swollen with bracketing; bowed crossbars on A and H; the stately proportions of inscriptional capitals: toward the end of the 19th Century, several competing foundries offered designs featuring these elements. Variations on the theme were manufactured by Bruce’s Type Foundry, MacKellar, Smiths & Jordan, Cincinnati Type Foundry, and Stephenson Blake. With names like “Runic” and “Celtic,” these types appealed to the popular appetite for semblances of exoticism and scholarship.