M+ Fonts

M+ FONTS are Japanese font families designed by Coji Morishita. The 'M' stands for 'Minimum', while the plus sign means above minimum.

Contents

M+ BITMAP FONTS

M+ BITMAP FONTS consists of raster fonts, originally developed in 2002.[1]

Font list

  • M+ gothic: Japanese with half-with Latin glyphs.
  • M+ goth_p: Japanese with proportional Latin glyphs.
  • M+ fxd: It consists of fixed-width glyphs. Fonts are made in heights of 10 and 12 pixels in regular and bold weights.
  • M+ hlv: It is a replacement of Helvetica. Fonts are made in heights of 10 and 12 pixels in regular and bold weights.
  • M+ sys: It is designed for user interface. Fonts are made in height of 10 pixels in regular and bold weights.
  • M+ qub: It is a 6-pixel high regular weight miniature font.

M+ OUTLINE FONTS

M+ OUTLINE FONTS (M+ 2P Light)
Category Sans Serif, Monospace
Designer(s) Morishita, Cōji (森下 浩司)
Foundry M+ FONTS PROJECT
Date created 2003-11-?
Date released

2003-12-? (TESTFLIGHT-001)

2011-12-09 v 045
Variations Thin, Light, Regular, Medium, Bold, Heavy, Black and Proportional, Monospace, and Combination Proportional/Monospace

The M+ OUTLINE FONTS are sans-serif, with proportional and monospaced fonts and many different weights ranging from thin to black. The fonts support following characters sets: C0 controls and basic Latin, Latin-1 Supplement, Latin Extended-A, Japanese Kana, and Japanese Kanji.[2] The fonts are developed using FontForge.[3] The current version contains over 3600 glyphs.

Font list

  • M+ 1: Consists of contrasting straight lines and hand-drawn curves.
  • M+ 2: Incorporates traditional feature of Kana script in the overall modern sans-serif design.
  • M+ P Type-1 (1P): aimed as sophisticated and relaxed design
  • M+ P Type-2 (2P):
  • M+ C Type-1 (1C): optimized to be proportioned well in typesetting
  • M+ C Type-2 (2C):
  • M+ M Type-1 (1M): created to emphasize the balance of natural letterform and high legibility
  • M+ M Type-2 (2M):
  • M+ MN Type-1 (1MN): high visibility font designed for programming use

The Latin Type-1 and Type-2 font are designed for use with M+ 1 and M+ 2 fonts respectively. Each Type-2 font has several alternative glyphs different from the respective Type-1 font.

Awards

It was selected as one of the "free fonts of the month" in Smashing Magazine,[4] and also selected as "Project of the Month" in SourceForge.JP.[5] It has also been selected as an excellent font among eight fonts for print and screen.[6]

Licensing

The license for these font files is as follows::

These fonts are free softwares. Unlimited permission is granted to use, copy, and distribute it, with or without modification, either commercially and noncommercially. THESE FONTS ARE PROVIDED "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY.[7]

References

External links