Iverse Mono from Minor Praxis is a monospace font, which means that its characters all occupy the same amount of horizontal space. The classic example of a monospace font is Courier, the font of typewriters and film scripts: 12 point Courier is usually required so script readers understand that each page of script equals one minute of screen time. Monospaced fonts were also used extensively in early computers, and are still common with software text editors as default fonts, hence improving the readability of source code. Monospaced fonts are also common in biochemistry to display nucleic acid and protein sequences, as the letter alignment makes it easier to compare sequences.

Aesthetically, a font like Iverse Mono can be used for these things, as well as playing off of them in artistic settings like display, posters, social media, branding, packaging, visual identity, digital artwork, and more. Iverse Mono is excellent for body copy and display, and is suitable for coding, captions, description details, layouts—wherever the monospaced format is required or is artistically suitable. Iverse Mono includes Opentype and Truetype formats, and comes with two styles—Regular and Bold. Please visit the glyphs page to fully appreciate the cool techno vibes of Iverse Mono, which can easily be applied to retro designs or futuristic modern projects.

 

Minor Praxis features the work of designer, typographer, and illustrator Rully Prayogi. Prayogi’s debut with YouWorkForThem was another monospaced font, the supercool sans serif Ingram Mono. Since then, Minor Praxis has been broadening the collection, and we hope to see much more. Most recently, we showcased the dark techno font Huben. In that vein, we are also keen for the heavy font Beiko. Inspired by toy block design, this is a dense display font or headline font which pairs well with a basic sans serif font for body text. Please consider these and the entire Minor Praxis collection!