--- layout: default --- {% assign release_version = site.data.fontinfo[0].version %}{% capture download_url %}https://github.com/rsms/inter/releases/download/v{{ release_version }}/Inter-{{ release_version }}.zip{% endcapture %}{% for file in site.static_files %}{% assign _path = file.path | remove_first: "/inter" %}{% if _path == "/index.css" %}{% assign index_css_v = file.modified_time | date: "%Y%m%d%H%M%S" %}{% elsif _path == "/index-var.css" %}{% assign index_var_css_v = file.modified_time | date: "%Y%m%d%H%M%S" %}{% elsif _path == "/index-var.js" %}{% assign index_var_js_v = file.modified_time | date: "%Y%m%d%H%M%S" %}{% endif %}{% endfor %}
Inter features a tall x-height to aid in readability of mixed-case and lower-case text. Several OpenType features are provided as well, like contextual alternates that adjusts punctuation depending on the shape of surrounding glyphs, slashed zero for when you need to disambiguate "0" from "o", tabular numbers, etc.
Using Inter is as easy as downloading & installing the font files. If you're making a web thing, you can simply use this CSS:
@import url('https://rsms.me/inter/inter.css'); html { font-family: 'Inter', sans-serif; } @supports (font-variation-settings: normal) { html { font-family: 'Inter var', sans-serif; } }
Size dp = spacing em
There's of course no absolute right or wrong when it comes to expressing yourself with typography, but Inter Dynamic Metrics provides guidelines for good typography. You simply provide the optical font size, and the tracking and leading is calculated for you to produce the best results.
Inter is a free and open source font family.
You are free to use this font in almost any way imaginable.
Refer to the SIL Open Font License 1.1 for exact details on what the conditions and restrictions are.
There are nine weights, each with italic counterparts, making a total of 18 styles.
Inter is offered as both traditional constant font files (one per style, e.g. Bold Italic, Medium, etc.) as well as a Variable Font which contains all styles in a much smaller file size. Additionally, a variable font is ...variable! You can mix and match weight and italic angle as you please, forming theoretically infinite variations.
Variable fonts is a new technology and support is somewhat in flux at
the time of writing this (fall 2018.)
This test can be used to discover
what a web browser is capable of.
Inter comes with many OpenType features that can be used to tailor functionality and aesthetics to your specific needs. Some of these features can be combined to form a great number of alternative variations.
{{f.tag}}
{{f.description}}
{% endif %}{% assign feat_tag = f.tag %}{% assign has_feature_col = false %}{% for s in f.samples %}{% if s.feat %}{% assign has_feature_col = true %}{% break %}{% endif %}{% endfor %} {% if has_feature_col %}{% if feat_tag == "calt" %} /* calt is enabled by default */ {% else %} font-feature-settings: '{{feat_tag}}' 1 {% endif %}
{% if f.footer %}{{f.footer}}
{% endif %}
Additional features, not highlighted above:
locl
,
salt
,
aalt
,
ccmp
,
cpsp
and
ordn
.
You can explore features in the interactive lab.
Inter started out in late 2016 as an experiment to build a perfectly pixel-fitting font at a specific small size (11px.) The idea was that by crafting a font in a particular way, with a particular coordinate system (Units Per EM), and for a particular target rasterization size (11), it would be possible to get the best of both sharpness and readability.
However after a few months of using an early version of Inter, it dawned on everyone exposed to the test that this approach had some serious real-world problems. Most notably that it was really hard to read longer text. Because of the pixel-aligning nature of that approach, the font took an almost mono-spaced appearance, making it really easy to read numbers, punctuation and very short words, but eye-straining to read anything longer.
The project was rebooted with a different approach, sticking with the specific UPM, but crafting glyphs and kerning in a way that made for more variation in the rhythm and smoother vertical and horizontal stems. As Inter was being developed, it was tested on an internal version of Figma—where the author of Inter works as a designer—and slowly improved upon based on experience and feedback.
font-feature-settings. In Figma you can access features via the Advanced Type panel. In Illustrator, Photoshop and friends, you can access features via the Characters and OpenType panels. Sketch doesn't provide a UI for configuring font features, but there's a workaround using macOS's native font UI.
https://rsms.me/inter/inter.cssand associated font files very reliable and fast throughout the world.