I’ve been loving how the 90s and early 00s are coming back, and I can’t stop thinking about the sweatshirts you’d see Princess Diana wear around with bike shorts (plus, my dad gave me a vintage sweatshirt that is always and forever a go-to).
Sailing Club is a beautifully nostalgic upper and lowercase typeface that works best as a focal display text (think logos, headers, pretty quotes, calls to action, etc.).
The upper and lowercase give it great versatility, but I honestly just can’t get over a tightly kerned all caps. It’s too good.
I’ve also been loving combining the regular and italic, especially in cool, longer quotes (see the “Join Us” graphic, image #5)
One thing to note about Sailing Club is the letter spacing. It was spaced for clean reading and intentional balance, so I recommend setting the spacing a little tighter if you want to create the all caps display look found in many of these images (around -20 to -35 should do!).
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Yes! You'll need a desktop license to use this font for your logo or other print designs. If you'd like to use the font on your website (outside of a rasterized image), you'll need a web license as well.
Each font license covers different usage situations. For example, a desktop license will cover the functions of most design work (i.e. making logos, print materials, social media promos, etc.).
A web license, however, is needed when you want to use the font on a website (i.e. using a custom font for your website headers). 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 is specifically 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.
App licenses are appropriate 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.).
You'll need as many licenses as users. So if you work at a design firm where 30 designers on your team will need access to the font, you'll need to purchase 30 of the appropriate license.
Just shoot me an email at support@jenwagner.co and I'll be happy to help!