Kremlin Pro was designed by Tagir Safayev and published by ParaType.
Kremlin Pro contains 3 styles and family package options.
The first version of Kremlin was designed at ParaType (ParaGraph) in 1995 by Tagir Safayev. Based on an informal handwriting. Kremlin is a Russian word for a fortress or a citadel. The reason why the author selected this word for the font name is not quite clear even for him. Probably the appearance of the text line set in this font resembled a tight fence. Later the font was expanded in character set and got two style variations with extended proportions. The suffix 'Pro' in the name was added to distinguish the new version from the previous one. The derivative work was done by Dmitry Kirsanov and Gennady Fridman in 2010. The font is recommended for advertising and display typography.
Font Family:·
Kremlin Pro·
Kremlin Pro SemiExpanded·
Kremlin Pro Expanded DemiFile Size: 2.28 MB
Tags: advertising,
casual,
childish,
children, childrens,
comic, comic book, comics, comic text,
commercial,
condensed,
confident,
cursive,
cyrillic, cyrillic asian,
design,
diary,
diner,
disconnected,
dynamic,
economic,
expanded, felt tip,
fish,
flair,
food,
freestyle,
friendly,
funny,
gaming,
hand,
handwriting,
handwritten,
happy,
headline,
informal,
irregular,
jdodds-sig, kids,
lettering,
lively,
loose,
magazine,
menu,
monoline,
multilingual, notes, old russian,
organic,
pen,
plain,
playful,
poster,
print,
quick,
reclame,
regular,
restaurant,
scrapbook,
signature, sign painting,
sketch,
summer,
tag,
teenage,
travel,
turkish,
unique, upright script,
vacation,
wine,
writing,
young,
youthRelease date: July 15, 2010
You can use this font for:
- Design projects: create images or vector artwork, including logos
- Website publishing: create a Web Project to add any font from our service to your website
- PDFs: embed fonts in PDFs for viewing and printing
- Video and broadcast: use fonts to create in-house or commercial video content and more
- The fonts are designed to work on MacOS (Apple) and Windows (Microsoft)
Preview: