Proxima Nova has been continually updated and expanded since its release. Additions have included support for Greek, Cyrillic, and Vietnamese, numerous currency symbols, as well as a Medium weight for all three widths and italics, bringing the total number of fonts in the family to 48.

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Mark Simonson Studio is home to a range of typefaces that are as thoughtful and unique as their namesake, Mark Simonson. Each distinctive family of fonts is created as a tool for making things, not ends in themselves. For graphic designers and typographers, this means that each detail included was well-considered and will help your work look its very best. Whether display or text, sans, serif, or script, there is a perfectly suitable typeface that will fulfill every need in your design brief.

Proxima Nova (2005) bridges the gap between typefaces like Futura and Akzidenz Grotesk. The result is a hybrid that combines modern proportions with a geometric appearance. I originally released it in 1994 as Proxima Sans (now discontinued) with a basic character set in three weights (Regular, Medium, and Black) with italics. I expanded the original six fonts into a full-featured and versatile family of 42 fonts (seven weights in three widths with italics).

Update: I developed a work-around to get all the fonts to display correctly. First I changed all header fonts to Proxima Nova Condensed with a font-weight of 200px. Then I changed h2, h3, and h4 back to Proxima Nova with a font-weight of 600px using CSS. So far this has been the only way I've been able to get a thin Proxima Nova Condensed font to show up on Chrome, Firefox, and Safari.

Not sure if you found a solution. Ran into this issue myself and found the solution. Make sure that your CSS says 'proxima-nova-condensed' instead of 'proxima nova condensed' as in the example below because CSS does not recognize the font otherwise.

All instances of Squarespace-provided fonts, which on my site includes all default H4 text and CTAs/buttons (font = Brandon Grotesque) as well as all body text (font = Artigo). They are defaulting to what looks like Times New Roman or similar. Screengrab of an example attached. The only font displaying correctly in Internet Explorer, according to Safari's Responsive Design Mode preview, is the custom one I've uploaded and added to my CSS with @font-face ("BrandonTextWeb-Bold") for my H1/H2/H3.

I can't really chine in to try to solve your problem, but what strikes me is that the author of the Font (the designer) is Mark Simonson and he distributes the font through his own foundry

 

The type Founders distributes Mark Simonson's fonts through their own platform (that happens a lot that someone decides to offer their typefaces through multiple channels), and it seems like he and the Type Founders foundry are one and the same entity (see the footer of his website)

I'm having the same issue with one of my clients, and they are continuing to ask for licensing. I've responded to let them know I hold a subscription to Adobe fonts, and that the licensing covers personal and commercial usage. This is very frustrating, however, and should be resolved through Adobe. I'll also reach out to Adobe and see I get any answers!

Im not sure in what way or to what degree these font providers are hassling you or your client, but it seems rather straight forward from.the language Adobe uses that these fonts are intended for use, personally and commercially by those who pay for the use of Adobes font kit. Im sure I would make some digital and hard copy records of the permissions Adobe granted...although Id have a hard time summoning the drive to do much else. Theres always going to be someone trying to snag another sweetthang, or bubbas cornbread, they need a better font to encapsulate their banal attempts at redundant sales.

As of at least January 1, 2020, any client for whom you create a website must have their own Creative Cloud subscription to ensure they have a valid license to serve fonts from Adobe Fonts to their site. Alternatively, they could obtain a web font license for self-hosting directly from the owner of the fonts in question. (While Mark Simonson designed Proxima Nova, his fonts now owned by The Type Founders, a private equity-backed entity. I'd recommend licensing fonts owned by independent designers, as you'll find they're more reasonable when it comes to licensing.)

If every business I designed a sign for had to buy licenses of the fonts I used in their projects it would create severe problems that would ultimately blow right back at the type designers themselves. I already spend a serious amount of money on commercial fonts for my own uses. If my graphic design clients had to buy font files they don't need simply because I used them in a design project they would be pretty upset. In turn, I would end up being very limited on what kinds of type I could safely use in any designs. Ultimately I would end up buying far less commercial fonts or just quit buying them at all. Why would I spend hundreds of dollars on a commercial type family if I couldn't use it in commercial design projects for businesses? I'm not buying fonts just to admire how they look. A commercial fonts purchase is supposed to be an investment; if I couldn't safely use the fonts in graphic design projects then there's no point in buying them in the first place.

I got an email from The Type Founders about a font that i'm using on my website, wich is made in format.com, using their available fonts. The email says i'm using a font on my website without license... I don't understand, I'm using one of the fonts that format lets you choose, so it would be more of a problem from format than from me right?

I would like to get some help on this regard. Is this a normal situation and I should reciprocate? or are they trying to scam me?

@michelew83603738 thank you for the suggestion, but no I've never used the filters, however just in case I tried clicking Clear All a few times, but it still doesn't find it. It goes straight from the "po..." fonts to "PT..." fonts.

My Client did not have Proxima Nova installed on his machine & when we looked at the prototype on the Axure server from his laptop, all the Proxima Nova fonts were switched to serif fonts (Times New Roman? I think) & everything was completely misaligned. (Especially any text that used Proxima Nova Semibold.) In the end, I had to convert all the fonts to Arial just so they would look consistent between my Mac & his laptop.

Most email clients don't support web fonts, and no popular webmail services do. Even though you're referencing Proxima Nova, the font you're actually seeing in Gmail/Yahoo is the default system sans-serif (since you have no fallback fonts in your font stack)

Turns out I already had Proxima Nova installed through Adobe Fonts (fka Typekit). Those fonts don't show up in Font Book, but the system does recognize them as already being installed and therefore doesn't show them as available for download. When I deactivated the typeface through Adobe Fonts, it immediately showed up as available for download from Apple through Font Book. Hope this helps anyone with the same problem!

I'm not sure what you mean by "from Finder". The way to download it is to open Font Book, select "All Fonts" in the left column, find the greyed out "Proxima Nova" name in the list of fonts, select it, then click the "Download" button near the top of the Font Book window.

You don't say what is happening. All of Apple's fonts are installed with the operating system and they can not be readily removed. Are you saying that your system fonts folder is empty? I am sure that will not be the case. Are you trying to download some other fonts? If you can be more specific as to what you are doing, then we can be of assistance.

- You cannot add other fonts to Typography. In Typography, you can only use the fonts that Shopify provides. What I am showing is how to add fonts to your theme in base.css file, instead of editing fonts in Typography.

I had an instructional designer develop my storyline training in Proxima Nova font, which is not a MS standard font. Storyline alerted me that I didn't have the font installed so I installed it but it is still not recognizing the Proxima Nova Reg variation, which my computer says is installed. Now if I open the SL file, it corrupts all the text. Is there an easier or better way to handle situations with fonts? What is easier: 2351a5e196

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