Parisine was born as official parisian métro signage typeface. This family of typefaces has become over years one of the symbols of Paris the Johnston for the London Underground or the Helvetica for the New York Subway. The Parisine was created to accompany travelers in their daily use: ultra-readable, friendly, human while the context is a priori hostile. Meanwhile, Parisine is now a workhorse and economical sanserif font family, highly legible, who can be considered as a more human alternative to the industrial-mechanical Din typeface family. More human, but not fancy: No strange “swashy” f, or cursive v, w etc. on the italics, to keep certain expected regularity, important for information design, signages, and any subjects where legibility, sobriety came first. Born as signage typeface family, the various widths and weights permit a wider range of applications. In editorial projects, the Compress version will enhances your headlines, banners, allowing ultra large settings on pages. The Narrow version will be useful as direct compagnon mixed to standard width version when the space is limited.
Parisine Try Narr Clair Font
Designer: Jean Francois Porchez
Font Parisine Try Narr Clair. Examples of this font can be found on the font site exFont, designed by Jean Francois Porchez, include the number of glyphs 90 characters. You can find other similar fonts, or fonts in the same family as this font right below.
Preview Text Font
Parisine Try Narr Clair
85 Characters
Click any character to copy it to your clipboard
!
!
$
$
*
*
,
,
-
-
.
.
/
/
0
0
1
1
2
2
3
3
4
4
5
5
6
6
7
7
8
8
9
9
?
?
A
A
B
B
C
C
D
D
E
E
F
F
G
G
H
H
I
I
J
J
K
K
L
L
M
M
N
N
O
O
P
P
Q
Q
R
R
S
S
T
T
U
U
V
V
W
W
X
X
Y
Y
Z
Z
`
`
a
a
b
b
c
c
d
d
e
e
f
f
g
g
h
h
i
i
j
j
k
k
l
l
m
m
n
n
o
o
p
p
q
q
r
r
s
s
t
t
u
u
v
v
w
w
x
x
y
y
z
z
¨
¨
´
´
¶
¶
é
é
ë
ë
ñ
ñ
ù
ù
˜
˜
–
–
’
’
€
€
fi
fi
fl
fl
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