Display Fonts for Brand Typography
Display fonts are bold, attention-grabbing typefaces designed for headlines, logos, and brand statements. They trade versatility for personality, making them ideal for entertainment, gaming, creative studios, and brands that want to stand out immediately. Use sparingly — they are meant for impact, not body text.
6 curated fonts in this category. Try them with your brand assets.
Syne
Originally created by Lucas Descroix of Bonjour Monde for the Parisian art center Synesthesie, Syne is a geometric sans-serif with unusually condensed vertical proportions — short ascenders, descenders, and uppercase letters — giving it a sturdy yet approachable character. Its weight range is conceived as an exploration of synaesthesia in type design, making it a natural fit for creative studios, cultural institutions, and contemporary art brands. The family spans five upright weights with Latin and Greek support.
Unbounded
Unbounded is a display typeface born from a collaboration between Studio Koto, NaN, Parity Technologies, and the Web3 Foundation for the Polkadot Network — one of the first open-source, on-chain funded fonts. Its soft curves and contemporary geometric forms across six weights make it well-suited for tech-forward brands, Web3 projects, and bold headline treatments. The family includes over 1,300 glyphs covering Latin and Cyrillic scripts along with a unique figure-building symbol system.
Righteous
Designed by Brian J. Bonislawsky of Astigmatic, Righteous draws direct inspiration from the bold Art Deco lettering of Hungarian artist Robert Bereny's Modiano posters. Its smooth geometric curves and confident single-weight design make it a strong choice for entertainment, lifestyle, and retro-modern brands seeking a display face with vintage character. The all-caps DNA of its deco origins translates into a typeface that commands attention in headlines and logos while remaining clean and legible.
Orbitron
Designed by Matt McInerney, Orbitron is a geometric sans-serif conceived as a modern alternative to space-age classics like Eurostile and Bank Gothic. Its strictly geometric letterforms, clean lines, and squared-off curves evoke science fiction and aerospace aesthetics across four weights from light to black. Orbitron is a natural fit for tech startups, gaming brands, sci-fi projects, and any identity that wants to project a futuristic, high-tech sensibility.
Bungee
Created by David Jonathan Ross, Bungee is a chromatic display typeface that celebrates the tradition of urban vertical signage — from theater marquees to storefront lettering. Its characters feature straight-sided rounds and generous serifs engineered to stack vertically, with four layerable styles (Regular, Inline, Outline, Shade) that can be combined for multi-color effects. Bungee is ideal for bold branding, event posters, and any project that needs eye-catching, sign-painter-inspired display type.
Archivo Black
Designed by Hector Gatti at Omnibus-Type, Archivo Black is a grotesque sans-serif inspired by late nineteenth-century American typefaces and engineered for simultaneous use across print and digital platforms. Its heavy weight, wide proportions, and high-contrast strokes make it a powerful choice for headlines, posters, and brands that need maximum impact at large sizes. The typeface supports over 200 languages and pairs well with lighter sans-serifs for structured typographic hierarchies.