Agilera: Font

Agilera is available in 9 weights, from Thin to Black Ultra, with variable font support. Raster burn effect available via OpenType Stylistic Set 02.

In the sprawling cemetery of forgotten graphic design trends, few artifacts are as simultaneously reviled and beloved as the typography of the late 1990s and early 2000s. It was an era of Photoshop 5.0, bevel-and-emboss, and chrome filters. Yet, from the ashes of this chaotic digital noise rises a new (yet nostalgic) player: Agilera . Agilera Font

Studio Vorm calls this style The Origin Story According to foundry lore, lead designer Maarten Visser found a box of floppy disks in an abandoned internet café outside Rotterdam in 2022. On them were corrupted files of a never-released typeface created for a fictional telecom giant in 1999. The original brief was for a logo font that felt "fast, digital, and trustworthy." Agilera is available in 9 weights, from Thin

At first glance, it appears to be a respectable neo-grotesque sans serif—think Helvetica Now or Inter. The x-height is generous. The kerning is mathematically precise. The lowercase 'a' is simple, rounded, and approachable. You could set a bank statement in Agilera and no one would blink. It was an era of Photoshop 5

Visser spent two years reconstructing the bits. He didn't just redraw the letters; he preserved the limitations of the era. The curves in Agilera aren't perfectly bezier-smooth; they have the slight jaggedness of a low-resolution screen.