“Although Capucine defies tra­di­tion­al cat­e­go­riza­tion, it sits in a genre we are drawn to as users of type: a face with dis­tinct per­son­al­i­ty able to strad­dle the worlds of both text and dis­play with ease. In this con­text it should come as no sur­prise that its design­er was born and raised in France, a coun­try whose type his­to­ry is rich with suc­cess­ful instances of such attempts. From Auri­ol and Gras­set – type­faces that became sym­bol­ic of the Art Nou­veau style – to the icon­ic designs of Roger Excof­fon in the 1950s and 60s, French type design­ers have often tried to ful­fill the require­ments of effi­cient text set­ting while retain­ing a ges­tur­al qual­i­ty. Like many of its French pre­de­ces­sors, Capucine is dri­ven by the eye rather than geo­met­ri­cal dog­ma, bring­ing a warmth and live­li­ness to the page.”

Capucine at Process Type Foundry

Via I Love Typog­ra­phy