Corey Anderson

Open-source type designer credited on 16 typefaces in the Google Fonts catalog — primarily working in handwriting.

About Corey Anderson

Corey Anderson is an established open-source type designer with a working catalog rather than a single release — credited on 16 open-source typefaces in the open-source library indexed by TypeCraft. All of the work falls within the handwriting category. Every typeface in the catalog below is distributed under a permissive open-source license, almost always the SIL Open Font License, and is free to use in commercial work without paying a licensing fee or asking permission.

The work concentrates on handwriting and script design, which sits at the intersection of typography and calligraphy. A successful handwriting designer captures the cadence and irregularity of a real human hand without sacrificing the consistency a typeface requires to function as a typeface. The decisions about stroke variation, baseline drift, and the design of the connections between letters together determine whether the typeface reads as personal, ceremonial, casual, or theatrical.

With 16 open-source releases in the catalog, Corey Anderson has the productive volume of a working type studio rather than an occasional contributor. The benefit for a designer browsing this page is range — there is enough work here to compare alternatives within a single foundry voice, which is harder to do across the catalogs of different designers. The work stays consistently inside the handwriting category, which is a feature rather than a limitation — designers who specialise tend to develop a deeper, more idiomatic voice within their chosen register than designers who range widely.

Every release in the catalog below is distributed under a permissive open-source license, which means you can ship these typefaces in commercial work, embed them in apps you sell, ship them with software you distribute, and modify the source files to suit a particular project — provided you respect the lightweight attribution and redistribution terms documented on the TypeCraft licensing page. The decision by Corey Anderson to release this work into the public open-source catalog is the reason the rest of the design industry can use it without a licensing budget, and is worth pausing to acknowledge.

If you found this designer through a specific typeface, the related families on each font's detail page point you to the closest stylistic neighbours in the broader catalog. If you would prefer to browse the open-source library by category — serif, sans-serif, display, handwriting, monospace — the categories index is the right starting point. If you are choosing a typeface for a specific job, the use-cases index filters the catalog by intent rather than by family.

Typefaces by Corey Anderson