Ramabhadra
Purushoth Kumar Guttula
SIL Open Font License, 1.1Ramabhadra is a Telugu font developed for use in headlines, posters and at large sizes. The letterforms are very round and have a uniform thickness, and the terminals have a small temple shape that appear like a sans-serif design. This font includes unique Telugu conjunct letters. Ramabhadra is named after the Telugu poet from the court of the king Krishnadevaraya, and was one of the Astadiggajalu (literally eight legends) there.
The Telugu is designed and developed by Purushoth Kumar Guttula in 2013 and made available by Silicon Andhra under the SIL Open Font License v1.1. The Latin is designed by Steve Matteson at Monotype, an internaional type foundry, and initially published as Arimo. The Ramabhadra project is led by Appaji Ambarisha Darbha, a type designer based in Hyderabad, India. To contribute, see github.com/appajid/ramabhadra
One morning, when Gregor Samsa woke from troubled dreams, he found himself transformed in his bed into a horrible vermin. He lay on his armour-like back, and if he lifted his head a little he could see his brown belly, slightly domed and divided by arches into stiff sections. The bedding was hardly able to cover it and seemed ready to slide off any moment. His many legs, pitifully thin compared with the size of the rest of him, waved about helplessly as he looked.
Font views in the last week
1,736,202This is the total number of times Ramabhadra was served by the Google Font API over the last week.
Usage by country
This is an overview of the geographical distribution of the requests for Ramabhadra.
This paragraph text uses Ramabhadra, which is frequently spotted on the web with Roboto. Try them out together on your website!
This paragraph text uses Roboto, which is frequently spotted on the web with Ramabhadra. Harmonizing different fonts together can make your website beautiful!
This paragraph text uses Ramabhadra, which is frequently spotted on the web with Open Sans. Try them out together on your website!
This paragraph text uses Open Sans, which is frequently spotted on the web with Ramabhadra. Harmonizing different fonts together can make your website beautiful!
This paragraph text uses Ramabhadra, which is frequently spotted on the web with Droid Sans. Try them out together on your website!
This paragraph text uses Droid Sans, which is frequently spotted on the web with Ramabhadra. Harmonizing different fonts together can make your website beautiful!
This paragraph text uses Ramabhadra, which is frequently spotted on the web with Raleway. Try them out together on your website!
This paragraph text uses Raleway, which is frequently spotted on the web with Ramabhadra. Harmonizing different fonts together can make your website beautiful!
This paragraph text uses Ramabhadra, which is frequently spotted on the web with Lato. Try them out together on your website!
This paragraph text uses Lato, which is frequently spotted on the web with Ramabhadra. Harmonizing different fonts together can make your website beautiful!
This paragraph text uses Ramabhadra, which is frequently spotted on the web with Oswald. Try them out together on your website!
This paragraph text uses Oswald, which is frequently spotted on the web with Ramabhadra. Harmonizing different fonts together can make your website beautiful!
This paragraph text uses Ramabhadra, which is frequently spotted on the web with Questrial. Try them out together on your website!
This paragraph text uses Questrial, which is frequently spotted on the web with Ramabhadra. Harmonizing different fonts together can make your website beautiful!
Quicksand
&
Ramabhadra
The header text above uses Quicksand, and this body text uses Ramabhadra. Try these fonts out together on your website - experiment with different sizes styles and weights. Harmonizing different fonts together can make your website beautiful!
Fonts