Font — Grisons
This is the font’s home turf. Because the x-height is moderately large (65% of the cap height), Grisons remains legible on newsprint and glossy paper alike. The generous spacing (default tracking is +5 compared to industry standards) means that tight columns of text never feel claustrophobic.
Named after the largest and most diverse canton in Switzerland—a region famous for its dramatic shifts from glacial peaks to Mediterranean valleys—Grisons Font is a typographic chameleon. It is a serif typeface that refuses to be pigeonholed. It is simultaneously a stoic classic and a rebellious contemporary. It is the font for the designer who wants to command authority without screaming, and whisper elegance without mumbling. Most revival typefaces look backward. Grisons looks sideways. Grisons Font
The defining letter of any serious serif. Grisons’ 'R' features a leg that kicks out further than usual, creating a sturdy tripod stance. The junction between the bowl and the stem is slightly flared, preventing ink traps at small sizes. In display settings, that leg becomes a graphic anchor. This is the font’s home turf