Is there a standard way (a symbol or icon) to indicate that a font is variable?

I haven't found any previous discussions on this topic. If there isn't one, I think it would be useful to have an icon to indicate variable fonts
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Best Answer

  • Thomas Phinney
    Thomas Phinney Posts: 3,011
    Answer ✓
    Nope!

    There was a standard icon invented for the OpenType format. We should have done something similar for variable fonts.

    Of course, even the name was hard to agree on. The Microsoft and Apple folks wanted OpenType Font Variations, and in fact that is the official name, with “Variable Fonts” as a sort of nickname/shorthand.

Answers

  • @Thomas Phinney Thanks. I was thinking of using something similar to this image, but I was hoping there was already an idea from experts.


  • @michele casanova Personally, I wouldn't associate that symbol with variable fonts. It might just indicate light / bold variants — feels more like a comparison symbol to me.

    It depends on the context, and this might not be any better, but I use a simple slider icon in my app to indicate variable fonts. This suggests there is a continuous range of styles, instead of discreet styles.

    @Thomas Phinney Do you know where can I find the standard icon for the OpenType format? Couldn't find an official one in a quick search.

  • In Windows 98, fonts used to change icon from TT to O after adding dsig table, indicating it is a open type font.
  • John Hudson
    John Hudson Posts: 3,428
    There’s no standard. This is what we use on the Tiro site: the icon for the individual font package with a VF label and a little slider graphic underneath.


  • Thomas Phinney
    Thomas Phinney Posts: 3,011
    edited 3:03AM
    mitradranirban That is indeed the OpenType logo, a half teal (blue-green), half black, italic O.

    General design was by somebody else. I made a font version of the icon, back at the time.