What is the Torus Variations font?
Torus Variations are an addition to the original monoline Torus family from 2017. The four new styles are Biline, Outline, Inline and Notched. The Torus family has been designed specifically for use in logo design, headlines and for branding purposes. While the default character sets are distinctive in their own right, graphic designers will love playing with the numerous alternate glyphs that will help them create unique wordmarks and logo designs. Torus’ simplistic forms and soft terminals make this a lovely, warm typeface perfect for a multitude of typographic applications.
Key features of Torus Variations Font
• 4 styles
• 6 weights
• 49 Alternates (via 2 Stylistic Sets)
• Full European character set (Latin only)
• 550+ glyphs per font.
Torus Variations Font families
The Torus Variations includes the following font families:
- Torus Outline Thin
- Torus Outline Light
- Torus Outline Regular
- Torus Outline Semi Bold
- Torus Outline Bold
- Torus Outline Heavy
- Torus Inline Thin
- Torus Inline Light
- Torus Inline Regular
- Torus Inline Semi Bold
- Torus Inline Bold
- Torus Inline Heavy
- Torus Biline Thin
- Torus Biline Light
- Torus Biline Regular
- Torus Biline Semi Bold
- Torus Biline Bold
- Torus Biline Heavy
- Torus Notched Thin
- Torus Notched Light
- Torus Notched Regular
- Torus Notched Semi Bold
- Torus Notched Bold
- Torus Notched Heavy
Torus Variations Preview
Here is a preview of how Torus Variations will look. For more previews using your own text as an example, click here.
Who Designed The Torus Variations Font?
Torus Variations font was designed by Paulo Goode, a talented designer from Ireland. He has designed many fonts over the years such as Sienna, Torus, Cream and Audacious.
Paulo is a type designer with a long history of technical illustration. He’s a talented graphic designer by trade as well as being deep into website design & development.
His type design career began in 1998, although at the time he didn’t realise that was the case. He was designing a corporate identity and his chosen proposal featured a Trajan-esque typeface. He actually hand drawn it for the client. For many years after he had a nagging thought that “there’s something about that type”. He had a deep and unfulfilled passion for it. So, at the end of 2014, he found the inspiration to dig the original files out and create a complete font. People liked it and started buying it. From thereon he has continued to design typefaces.