| Feature | Description | | :--- | :--- | | | Predominantly circular or oval; straight lines are avoided in favor of curves. | | Terminals | Completely rounded; no sharp or flat endings. | | Counter (inner space) | Wide, open counters that enhance legibility despite the bubbly form. | | Stroke Contrast | Low to moderate; strokes appear uniformly thick, mimicking inflated rubber or liquid. | | Ascenders/Descenders | Short to moderate; often curved to match the overall bubble motif. | | Junction Points | Smooth and seamless; strokes blend into each other without sharp angles. | | Special Glyphs | Often includes alternate characters (swashes, tails) and ligatures (e.g., "tt", "oo") to enhance the organic flow. |
Mara was a young typographer with a habit of rescuing odd artifacts. She brought the sheet home, scanned it, and traced the glyphs. The more she worked, the more the letters resisted copying: when she tried to reproduce the capital A the crossbar tilted differently each time, and the P's bowl seemed to breathe. She joked to friends that the font had mood swings. Avapore Font
Avapore is a display font inspired by the and Synthwave cultural movements. Think back to the neon-drenched 1980s: sunset gradients, chrome text, grid-lined floors, and Miami Vice credits. Avapore captures that retro-futuristic feeling but strips away the excessive ornamentation that often makes similar fonts unreadable. | Feature | Description | | :--- |