Grisons Font -
The canton of Grisons is home to the famous thermal baths of Vals (designed by Peter Zumthor). Grisons shares Zumthor’s philosophy: material honesty. The sharp cuts and consistent stroke weights mean the font holds up when cut into stone, etched into frosted glass, or routed into wood.
Bridging the gap between alpine precision and humanist warmth, Grisons isn’t just a typeface—it’s a topography of text. Grisons Font
This is the font’s home turf. Because the x-height is moderately large (65% of the cap height), Grisons remains legible on newsprint and glossy paper alike. The generous spacing (default tracking is +5 compared to industry standards) means that tight columns of text never feel claustrophobic. The canton of Grisons is home to the
Most italics are simply slanted romans. Grisons’ italic is a true cursive cousin. The 'v' and 'w' gain sweeping entry strokes. The 'e' opens up like a cursive hand. When you italicize a word in Grisons, you aren't just tilting it; you are changing its emotional register from declarative to conversational. Bridging the gap between alpine precision and humanist
Designed over three years by a collective of Swiss and German typographers (who prefer to remain anonymous, letting the work speak for itself), Grisons was born from a specific problem: How do you create a serif that works equally well for a $10,000 watch catalog and a sustainable farm’s annual report?