A type system is not a list of fonts. It is a small set of rules about when to be loud and, mostly, how to be quiet.
For the last three months we have been working on a single client's identity using exactly one typeface. Not one family, with twelve weights and three widths and an italic. One typeface. Fraunces, set at the optical sizes the family was drawn for, and nothing else. No grotesk for "tech" sections. No mono for code. No fallback for the things that were too important for serif. Just one.
What we learned
Three things, none of them surprising, all of them harder to actually do than to say:
- Optical size is doing more work than weight. The same typeface set at 9pt and at 144pt does not look like the same typeface. It barely shares a skeleton. If you respect optical sizes, you almost never need a second family.
- Italic is a tool, not an emphasis. We use italic for one thing only, in this system: the brand's own voice. It marks the moments when the brand is speaking, as opposed to merely informing. That single rule has done more for the system than any color or layout choice.
- The smallest size is the most important. Captions, footnotes, fine print. If those don't sing, the brand is fine but not memorable. We spent a full week on a single 11pt mono caption pattern. It was worth it.
One typeface, used well, is not a constraint. It is a statement that you trust the system.
The rituals
A few small habits from this project that we'll carry forward:
- Before showing any layout, we set every text element to optical size 144 and squint. If the hierarchy collapses, the hierarchy was a typographic illusion, not a real one.
- We name our text styles by role, never by appearance. Lede, not large serif italic. The role outlives the design; the appearance does not.
- We keep one document per project — a single PDF, updated weekly — that shows every text style at every size, on the actual paper or screen, with no other elements. It is the single source of typographic truth.
Three months in, we have not missed the second typeface once. We were, it turns out, using the second typeface to hide a problem with the first.