Margie is a clean & minimalist sans serif typeface that comes with cool script alternates. The mix of those two styles within this font is perfectly suited for designing outstanding logos & brands, refined packaging, modern website headers, and so much more!

This font is equipped with two uppercase alphabets – clean sans as the basis & script alternates – to make everything you design look refined, super unique and professional. Margie saves you the precious time it takes to find the perfect font pair for your next design project. The script alternates can be used by simply typing out the appropriate lowercase letter. This also means, that you can use this font very easily in any software, such as Canva.

Includes:
+ OTF files
+ Web font file (.WOFF) – only with Webfont License
+ Full uppercase alphabet
+ 26 Script Alternates (accessible by simply typing
   the appropriate lowercase letter)
+ Numbers & Punctuation & Basic Symbols
+ Non-English support

Margie – Sans
with Script Alternates

from $20

Each license allows different usage situations. A desktop license will cover the functions of most design work (i.e. making logos, print materials, social media promos, etc.).

A web license is needed when you plan to use and embed the font on a website. You won't need a web license if you create images with the text that you upload to your site – for example, a logo on a website is just fine with a desktop license because it's an image, not editable type.

An e-pub license covers the use for ebooks, so if you wanted to use a font for your chapter titles and publish the book to Kindle or another ebook format, you'll need an e-pub license.

An App license you need, when you'd like to use the font as non-editable text in an app.
Note: this is not a server license, so you cannot use an app license for print-on-demand or customizable design apps (i.e. Canva, Over, etc.).

What’s the difference between licenses?

Yes! Get yourself a desktop license to use this font for your logo or other print designs. If you plan to use the font on your website (outside of a rasterized image or vectorized logo), you need a web license as well.

Can I use these fonts for my logo?

Which license is right for you?

You'll need as many licenses as users. So if you work at a company where 10 designers on your team will need access to the font, you'll need to purchase 10 of the appropriate license.

How many licenses do I need?