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Font Friday

Larken

Larken shows a soft expressive elegance. Natural curves, swells and sloping serifs grow in character as the font gains weight.

Serif family

from Ellen Luff Type Foundry
designed by Ellen Luff

Variable Font

1 axis: weight

14 Styles

7 weights: Thin to Black
with matching italics

License from

$ 40 (single), $ 140 (bundle)

Best for

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

Specialty

An elegant serif display typeface that mixes tradition with simplicity, by showing confidence with a modern twist.

My thoughts on Larken

When I discovered Larken, I felt strongly drawn towards it, while I could not clearly articulate why. I had to take a closer look what it is, that makes this serif typeface by Ellen Luff so special. Larken coveys a certain elegance, which is rooted in its construction, based on traditional dynamic letter shapes. Reminding me of engravings, especially in the lighter weights.

Light and elegant such sweet swells
Larken shows a broad range of weights looks better in larger sizes with these beautiful italics

This classic construction is counterbalanced with a certain simplicity. The subtle, sloping serifs make it stable and noble, while the tender curves make Larken seem organic. This is mixed with sharp wedges and pointy angles that show decisiveness. Features that get highlighted even more in the stronger weights.

Sloping serifs, Tender curves, Sharp wedges, Pointy angles
A wonderful blend of contrasting traits make Larken so special

The italics show an interesting design decision as well. Compared to the upright style, all expected letter changes in the italics can be seen – like the single-stroy a, the f with the descender, or the curved bottom serifs – except for one. The g does not change shape, it is slanted. This is surprising and certainly gives it a contemporary twist, which can be a bit softened by using the stylistic alternate.

slanted g and Stylistic alternate with the open loop
The italic g is slanted, with a stylistic alternate that comes with an opened loop

Larken might be okay for a few paragraphs of running text, if you can set it larger than 20 px, but due to the tighter spacing and the stronger contrast it works best in display sizes. You see this also when using the nice rare ligatures, that giving you the ability to spice up certain your headlines or logotypes.

Some of Larken’s rare ligatures

Overall Larken conveys noble simplicity with a sharp, contemporary twist, the bolder it gets. Ideal for expressive statements, that are rooted in confidence and stability, it will deliver on packaging, in logo types and display text.


Thanks to Matt, who recommended this beautiful typeface to me. If you have a suggestion for an upcoming Font Friday, tell me in the comments!

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2 Comments

  1. Larken joins my list of fav this year from Font Fri’yay and beyond.
    You said it all, elegant, noble…taking our attention without even trying. I call it EFFORTLESS! There is something ancient in the Larken, that owns that dignity and charm.

    Too good to sit in the paragraphs. A true art of 6 virtue traits in letterforms. Pointy angles and tender curves – give it a feminine charm. Larken might be good for the publishing industry and for brand products such as fragrances.

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