Science Gothic
The Science Gothic font contains 1 styles and supports Latin languages. This font is not very popular at the moment. It has only 7 views and 0 downloads. This is a "Free font" font. But this is preliminary information. Be sure to check the license type before using the font. The author of this font is Thomas Phinney, Vassil Kateliev, Brandon Buerkle. Available styles: Regular.
- 7
- 0
- 09.02.2026
- Latin
- Free font
- Thomas Phinney, Vassil Kateliev, Brandon Buerkle
- Tags: free, google fonts
Categories:
Google Fonts
Images
Font file info
We have collected all the most important information about the Science Gothic Regular font.
Below is a table about the font file version, license, copyright, designer and vendor name.
The information is taken from the "TTF" font file.
- Full name
- Science Gothic Regular
- Font family
- Science Gothic
- Font subfamily
- Regular
- Version
- Version 1.035
- Trademark
- Science Gothic is a trademark of Font Detective LLC.
- Manufacturer
- Font Detective LLC
- Designer
- Thomas Phinney, Vassil Kateliev, Brandon Buerkle
- Designer URL
- https://sciencegothic.com
- Vendor URL
- https://sciencegothic.com
- License
- This Font Software is licensed under the SIL Open Font License, Version 1.1. This license is available with a FAQ at: https://openfontlicense.org
- License URL
- https://openfontlicense.org
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2025 The Science Gothic Project Authors (https://github.com/googlefonts/science-gothic/blob/main/AUTHORS.txt)
- Description
- Science Gothic is a variable font, designed by Thomas Phinney, Vassil Kateliev and Brandon Buerkle, with a little help from Igor Freiberger early on. The basic design is based on Morris Fuller Benton’s Bank Gothic (1930–34), for American Type Founders. Science Gothic builds on and extends Benton’s design by adding a lowercase, much more extreme variation in weight and width, and a stroke contrast axis. The latter allows for part of the range that is somewhat reminiscent of other period designs such as Benton’s Broadway (1927), and R. Hunter Middleton’s Radiant (circa 1938–40) for Ludlow.
