Thursday, 13 October 2016

Noto

Photo: Andy Dunn
Noto, Google’s multi-language font family from Monotype is designed to work over a wide range of different languages and on any device.
 

Noto covers more than 800 languages and 100 written scripts, and includes serif and sans serif fonts across eight weights as well as numbers, emoji, symbols, and musical notation.
 

The result of a five-year collaboration between Google and Monotype, one of the main aims for the typeface is to allow cultures to communicate digitally and help enable global communications across borders, languages and cultures.
 

Monotype has researched and digitally designed the characters, writing systems and alphabets for each Noto typeface, applying the rules and idiosyncrasies for individual languages to the fonts, based on the Unicode standard – a character coding system that defines the characters and languages that can be displayed and used within a computer system.
 

Because new scripts are constantly being added to Unicode, when a computer is unable to display a character in a font, it displays blank boxes instead. These are colloquially known as “tofu”. The name Noto is taken from Google’s goal of having “no more tofu”.

Monotype linguistic typographer Kamal Mansour says: “The aim of the Noto project is to provide digital representation to all the scripts in the Unicode Standard. That in particular is something that many different language communities could not afford to do on their own.”