Display, Handwritten typeface

from Maxitype
designed by Darryl ‘Cornbread’ McCray

Variable Font

1 axis: Weight

5 Styles

5 Weights: Skinny to Fat

Best for

  • Headings (display text)
  • Long reading text (body text)
  • User Interfaces (functional text)

License starting

around $140 (one style)
around $500 (bundle)

Specialty

A graffiti-inspired font that brings a casual, authentic street style to your projects.

My Cornbread Font Review

This week’s typeface transports us to Philadelphia’s streets in the late 1960s. Entering the scene: Darryl “Cornbread” McCray, the first modern graffiti writer. He’s considered a living legend, and now his friendly, casual handwriting was turned into a sophisticated font.

Rounded & legible, Easy going, cool, Casually mixing upper and lower case to create this flowing and friendly look. a Graffiti Legend!!!! 100 times better than Money.
I love how well Cornbread captures the street art vibe in a font.

What I find most appealing is how relatable Cornbread feels. The font captures the aesthetics of casual graffiti writing so well. See how playfully the typeface combines upper and lower case letter shapes to create rhythmical word images. Cornbread seems basic, but interesting, soft, at times a bit rough, but always approachable.

Showing the five different weights: Skinny, Light, Regular, Bold, and Fat.
The stronger weights, especially, pull you in!

Cornbread’s biggest feature certainly is the refined contextual alternates. By providing a ton of additional characters and ligatures, they add more diversity to the typeface.

Comparing the text “Fitting Alternates!!!” with contextual alternates turned off and on.
The contextual alternates adding more striking and bigger letters at the beginnings and ends of words.

In my opinion, the stylistic alternates work best for headings. When it comes to a short paragraph of text, it might also be interesting to turn them off, as you can see below. This will make it a bit more readable, This makes it more readable but less authentic, as character repetition becomes more noticeable.

Comparing text with the contextual alternates off. Without them, it looks calmer and is a bit easier to read. But it’s also less authentic, since character repetition becomes much more obvious.
With the alternates turned off, Cornbread is a bit more readable
With the alternates turned on, Cornbread looks more genuine

Compared to other handwritten-style typefaces, Cornbread comes with a friendly coolness. Compared to the artist’s original writing, it is a bit more polished, but still conveys the essence. Whether for editorial headlines or app design, Cornbread adds a friendly coolness that’s hard to ignore. Give it a try and bring some street art charm to your next project!

Font Pairings with Cornbread

Cornbread shows a unique blend of handwriting styles. Pair it with something soft and rounded or clean and geometric.

Cornbread
Cornbread
  • Headings

Learn more about pairing typefaces using the Font Matrix.


What are your thoughts on in? Tell me in the comments! Also, if you came across another interesting font that I should take a look at.

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Edition #181, published

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