{"title":"Albrecht Fraktur","description":"In his 1538 book on measurement, Albrecht Dürer gave clear descriptions and drawings about the proportions of the letters in both Roman and \u003ci\u003e'fraktur'\u003c\/i\u003e alphabets (from Latin \u003ci\u003e'fractura'\u003c\/i\u003e, meaning that it's broken up with lots of different angles rather than smooth curves). Here is the fraktur alphabet as a font completed for use today, with a few characters modernised and some gaps filled.\r\n\nOf course there are countless examples of \u003ci\u003e fraktur \u003c\/i\u003e fonts already circulating, and indeed one foundry even has another version of this particular one; but we have different approaches to some of the questions raised, we have aimed at a more even tracking (horizontal spacing), and the 260 glyphs in our version include accents and other diacritics, and the modern symbols which Dürer would surely have embraced if he had had access to the internet.","products":[],"url":"https:\/\/www.myfonts.com\/collections\/albrecht-fraktur-font-new-renaissance-fonts.oembed","provider":"MyFonts","version":"1.0","type":"link"}