• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Jack and Mo

A Boutique Design Agency | Logo Design & Love For Your Brand.

  • Home
  • About
    • Kind Words
    • FAQ
  • Portfolio
    • Logo Designs
    • Brand Gallery
    • Brand Style Guides
  • Work Together
  • Shop
    • Custom Design Packages
    • The Logo Collection
  • Studio Articles
  • Say Hello
  • Cart

    What the font? Understanding Commercial Licensing

    Biz Advice, Graphic Design, Typography, Understanding Graphic Design

    In The Loop Font Designed by Patrick Seymour

    Did you know that a lot of font styles require users to purchase a commercial license before use? Fonts are intellectual property and subject to restrictions just like software. Is your mind blown right now?!

    This is something many folks have never given a moment’s thought. But it makes sense once you consider it. Font designers work incredibly hard to develop well-rounded fonts with a full character palette, weights, glyphs.

    With growing markets for couture font styles like Creative Market and My Fonts, free download sites like DaFont, 1001Free Fonts and Behance, the stipulations get a little confusing. There are different types of licensing: desktop, web, ebook, app/software. There can be a 1-time payment or a subscription-based purchase. You can have unlimited or limited page views, limits to how many websites on which you use the font, and hosted vs. self-hosted.

    How do you ensure you know the details before using a font? Almost all font designers have websites that specify their rules, restrictions, and prices. Go to the source and ensure you have the guidelines straight before letting a font become part of your brand! Sometimes fonts are as little as $15 for commercial use. Sometimes as much as several hundred. It can be well-worth the investment to set your brand apart.

    ,

    If licensing isn’t something you want to worry with, consider great free for commercial use fonts like Google Fonts that work well both in desktop applications and the web. *Typography shown is “In the Loop” designed and developed By Patrick Seymour. Further Sources:

    Wired: You Wouldn’t Think It, But Typeface Piracy is a Big Problem

    Aeodilia: Understanding Webfont Licensing Structures

    You might also like

    • what is the difference between vectors and pixels

      What Is The Difference Between Vectors and Pixels?

    • What is a Logo, Really? (and What Makes One Great)

    • Gold Foil is Stunningly Beautiful, But How Do You Print it?

      Gold Foil is Stunningly Beautiful! But How Do You Print it?

    calligraphy, fonts, fonts requiring a commercial license, free for commercial use fonts, scripts, typography, understanding fonts

    Primary Sidebar

    Studio Articles by Jack and Mo: Logo love, branding brilliance. Tips, tricks, and resources for logo design + branding. #creativemagic

    FROM THE STUDIO

    Logo love, branding brilliance.

    Tips, tricks, and resources for logo design + branding. #creativemagic

    Recent Posts

    • The Art of Creating a Brand Color Palette
    • How to Create Beautiful Color Palettes From Any Image
    • The Best Websites to Explore Color
    • What is a Logo, Really? (and What Makes One Great)
    • How to Create the Perfect Brand Identity
    • What Is a Brand Style Guide — and Why Does It Matter?
    • How to Make Your Brand Identity Memorable
    • How to Match Paint Colors to Your Branding
    • Need a Website but Have Limited Cash Flow? How to Get Started on the Web
    • Why Pinterest Can Be Bad for Branding
    • Gold Foil is Stunningly Beautiful! But How Do You Print it?
    • What is Image Resolution?
    • Email
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • Pinterest

    • Home     About     Portfolio     Work Together     Shop     Studio Articles     FAQ     Policies     Contact


    DESIGNED BY JACK + MO
    © 2008 - 2026