Metroscript OT
Michael Doret had been doing lettering in styles similar to Metroscript in his design work for many years. But only with the advent of OpenType technology did he realize that he could actually put together a script font that would finally do justice to this style, and be almost indistinguishable from hand-lettering.

There was no one single inspiration for Metroscript: rather it is an amalgam of many different scripts that were popular hand-lettered styles between the 1920s and the 1950s. Metroscript is suggestive of vintage sports ephemera—especially when tails are added to words—but is also appropriate in many other contexts. It’s many ligatures, swashes, alternates, foreign accented characters and tails—all of which connect seamlessly—set it apart from most other script fonts. In 2009, Metroscript’s sibling font Deliscript was launched.

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Display Sample
Text Sample
Character SetOpenType Features Hover over a feature to learn more. Click a feature to filter Character Set view.- Show All Glyphs
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Contextual Alternates When available, replaces default glyphs with alternate forms which provide better joining behavior.
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Standard Ligatures Replaces a sequence of glyphs with a single glyph, e.g. 'fi', 'fl'. This feature is enabled by default and cannot currently be disabled.
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Stylistic Alternates Replaces the default forms with stylistic alternates. Note that there may be more than one stylistic alternate for a given character.
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Stylistic Set Stylistic alternatives grouped as sets.
- Stylistic Set 2
- Stylistic Set 3
- Stylistic Set 4
- Stylistic Set 5
- Stylistic Set 6
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Swash Replaces default character glyphs with corresponding swash glyphs. Note that there may be more than one swash alternate for a given character.

Font 201812 | Fam 6937

